Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday August 11, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 8.11.21
A month after celebrating its anniversary, Delegal | Aubuchon Consulting announced that its team is expanding with the addition of Scott Jenkins as government affairs director.
“Scott’s industry experiences along with his work on political campaigns and political advising will be a great complement to our services,” firm partner Mark Delegal said. “Most importantly, we have confidence in his integrity and work ethic.”
Jenkins brings nearly two decades of government relations experience to the firm. He worked as a deputy director of government relations for the Florida Bankers Association from 2002-10 and as state government relations director for Wells Fargo from 2010-18. Earlier in his career, he served as a legislative analyst in the House and as a field director for the Republican Party of Florida.
“I’ve known Mark and Josh for more than a decade,” Jenkins said. “I am joining a team known for its in-depth policy knowledge and strong relationships and am proud to have found a place where I know I will thrive professionally while working with great people.”
Jenkins has experience managing advocacy projects and initiatives spanning multiple states, including managing state and federal political campaigns and advising legislative body leaders and committee chairs.
“We’ve always worked well with Scott on various issues over the years, and we’re excited to have him as part of the team,” said firm partner Josh Aubuchon. “He is passionate and experienced in the arena of Florida politics. He’s a good guy and a natural fit.“
Florida Bankers Association EVP of government affairs Anthony DiMarco praised the hire, “Working with Scott has always been a pleasure. He’s someone who brings an excellent reputation and a wealth of Florida policy knowledge. I look forward to seeing what they accomplish together.”
Jenkins earned a bachelor’s degree in secondary education from Clemson University and a master’s degree in political science from Florida State University.
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The Florida Transportation Builders’ Association held its annual conference in Orlando last weekend, and some attendees left with some bragging rights.
FTBA presented its Best in Construction awards at the conference, honoring companies that worked on the “most innovative, complex and impactful transportation system projects around the state.”
This year’s winners, selected in partnership with the Florida Department of Transportation, included Kiewit Infrastructure South Co., Superior Construction Company Southeast, Ajax Paving Industries of Florida, and many others.
“We are proud of this year’s award winners for the excellent example they set for our industry and for upholding the highest standards as they work to improve transportation systems throughout Florida,” said FTBA President Ananth Prasad.
FTBA’s Best in Construction awards are given for outstanding work in 15 different categories ranging from major bridge to utility coordination. The full list of award recipients is available online.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@WalshFreedom: Donald Trump, “Mr. Real Estate, Mr. Builder,” was too fucking incompetent to even get an infrastructure bill done.
—@alivitali: It’s important to point out that men elevating some women to positions of power does not insulate, absolve, or prevent those same men from harassing or intimidating other women.
—@MaryEllenKlas: So much energy has had to go into unraveling something so easily remedied. Florida could resume reporting on its website daily, and timely, the COVID detail it collects. Communities, school districts, Mayors, parents, the CDC and the media might then be a little better informed.
—@Mike_Grieco: Question: If taxpayer-funded public schools are prohibited from mandating masks … what about the private schools that receive taxpayer-funded vouchers and have mask mandates? I ask because if the bs prohibition is only for public schools, we might see an equal protection issue.
—@VoteRandyFine: I love the virtue signaling by some of these local politicians. A “mandate” with an opt-out is not a mandate. Perhaps we need to actually mandate vocabulary training for certain politicians.
—@TravisDGibson: St. Johns County School Board meeting public comment is off to an interesting start: “I’m a Christian, I would never mask my children. We’re made in the image of God of the Bible; we will not conceal that image for it is not pleasing to our Lord.” … “So just like this board cannot ask Muslim students to remove religious headwear, this board cannot ask Christian children to conceal their identity by wearing a mask.”
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— DAYS UNTIL —
Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 7; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 13; Boise vs. UCF — 22; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 23; Notre Dame at FSU — 25; NFL regular season begins — 29; Bucs home opener — 29; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 34; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 34; Alabama at UF — 38; Dolphins home opener — 39; Jaguars home opener — 39; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 40; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 44; ‘Dune’ premieres — 51; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 51; MLB regular season ends — 53; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 58; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 76; World Series Game 1 — 77; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 77; Georgia at UF — 80; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 83; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 83; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 88; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 89; Miami at FSU — 94; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 100; FSU vs. UF — 108; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 112; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 121; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 128; NFL season ends — 151; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 153; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 153; NFL playoffs begin — 154; Super Bowl LVI — 186; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 226; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 270; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 295; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 331; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 343; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 422; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 457.
“Florida capital schools go against Ron DeSantis, require masks” via Adriana Gómez Licón of The Associated Press — Though the Leon County mandate allows exemptions for students with a physician’s or psychologist’s note, it doesn’t give parents the authority to opt out, as DeSantis wanted. Leon County Schools Superintendent Rocky Hanna announced in a livestreamed announcement that children from prekindergarten through eighth grade will be required to wear masks when classes resume in Tallahassee. “I did a lot of soul searching, a lot of thinking,” Hanna said. “If, heaven forbid, we lost a child to this virus, I can’t just simply blame the Governor of the state of Florida. I can’t.
“Florida Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran ramps up threat to school officials over masks” via Ryan Dailey of The News Service of Florida — Corcoran is looking to enforce DeSantis’ threat to withhold the salaries of school officials in Alachua and Leon counties if they don’t comply with a state rule aimed at allowing parents to decide whether children wear masks in school. “The emergency rule does not require parents to submit medical documentation from a physician or a nurse practitioner to opt out, and any such requirement is inconsistent with the emergency rule,” Corcoran wrote to leaders of both districts. Corcoran reiterated DeSantis’ position that parents should be able to decide whether children wear masks.
“‘We will not switch.’ Florida school officials defy DeSantis over pay cut threats” via Ana Ceballos and Bianca Padró Ocasio of the Miami Herald — At least three Florida school districts are defying DeSantis as they impose mask mandates with some medical exceptions, even as his administration threatens to withhold the pay of superintendents and school board members that go against his orders. DeSantis’ administration has signaled it intends to follow through with threats to dock the salaries of superintendents and school board members who vote not to give parents the full and unilateral ability to opt their children out of mask mandates. Broward County Public Schools on Tuesday became the third district in the state to show resistance against the Governor, joining Alachua County Public Schools and Leon County Public Schools.
“Broward schools require students to wear masks, defying Governor again” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Broward County students will have to wear masks in schools, and parents may not be able to opt out easily, the School Board decided Tuesday. The board voted 8-1, with Lori Alhadeff dissenting, to defy DeSantis and directives from two state agencies. The board also agreed to pursue legal action challenging state rules that allow parents to ignore mask mandates for their children. The action means the district keeps a mask mandate that requires all students, staff and visitors to wear masks when school starts Aug. 18. The only exception will be for students with medical conditions, or requirements of an individual education plan, which are already exemptions that have been allowed for the past year.
“Michael Grieco will skip pay if DeSantis delivers on threat to withhold school admin money” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Grieco said he will work without pay if DeSantis follows through on a threat to withhold the salaries of school administrators who defy his executive order against school mask mandates. “I’ll say this right now. If the Governor pulls anybody’s salary, I am committing personally to forgo whatever measly salary I get in the House until that gets resolved,” he said. Florida lawmakers are paid about $30,000 yearly, plus a $152 per diem allowance. Fellow Democratic Reps. Robin Bartleman, Fentrice Driskell and Anna Eskamani also spoke during the 40-minute virtual event.
“Mike Burke on masks and salary — ‘I didn’t get into this job for the money’” via Sonja Isger of the Palm Beach Post — The first day of the new school year is now underway with more than 167,000 students expected to learn in person and with masks on unless their parent provided a note opting out. Palm Beach County Superintendent Burke, who landed the interim job last month, began his inaugural first-day tour of schools in Riviera Beach at Washington Elementary, arriving as students did in a typical Florida downpour. “I’m pretty excited to see smiling faces,” Burke said standing in the cafeteria of the school rebuilt over the last year. “It’s a new perspective,” said the man, who comes to the superintendency from the finance side of the district. “It’s kind of neat to see it all come together.”
“Just 4% of Orange students opted out of masks as new school year begins in Central Florida” via Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — Thousands of Central Florida students headed back to school Tuesday, many of them wearing face masks, a visible, and contentious, sign the pandemic will put a stamp on the 2021-22 school just as it did to its predecessor. In Orange County Public Schools, only 4% of the nearly 180,000 students who attended classes Tuesday came without a mask and note from their parents opting them out of face-covering rules, Superintendent Barbara Jenkins announced at an evening Orange County School Board meeting.
“About 12% of Lee County students opt out of school mask mandate” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — More than 10,000 parents in Lee County opted their students out of the district’s mask requirement. But that means eight of nine students attending their first day of school will still mask up. The Lee County School District said as of the start of the school day Tuesday, a total of 10,664 opt-out forms had been turned in. There could still be more submitted, as the district just started the new school year Tuesday. Officials only announced a masking policy on Sunday and did not release an opt-out form until Monday, when it was sent to parents via email. The total represents just under 12% of the 89,024 students enrolled in district-run K-12 schools.
“Senate Democrats to launch GoFundMe for defiant superintendents, school board members” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — DeSantis may not want to pay School Board members backing mask mandates. But Senate Democrats intend to make sure those officials receive a paycheck. Senate Democratic Leader Lauren Book and caucus leadership announced they will launch a GoFundMe raising private donations to support education leaders if the Governor follows through on his threat. “If the Governor chooses to defund public education and withhold salaries from educators as punishment for protecting students’ health and safety, we will fill the gap to support them in this fight,” said Book.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“One state agency is collecting COVID-19 data, the other is publicizing it, and no, it ain’t talking” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — A COVID-19 data discrepancy published first by the CDC and then read out loud to media outlets by Nikki Fried is highlighting just how dysfunctional the lines of communication are between two of Florida’s biggest state agencies. The Florida Department of Health tracks the state’s COVID-19 data, but Fried, who heads up the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, gives daily COVID-19 briefings. Rather than request COVID-19 data from the FDOH a few miles away in Tallahassee, FDACS relies on COVID-19 data that gets routed from FDOH through the CDC. The only actual communication on the matter between FDACS and FDOH is in the public forum.
“Florida accuses CDC of inflating COVID-19 numbers in apparent CDC mistake” via Jane Musgrave of The Palm Beach Post — In a move that reignited calls for Florida to resume daily COVID-19 reports, state health officials on Tuesday accused the CDC of inflating the number of new coronavirus infections Florida tallied over the weekend. The apparent mistake did nothing to change the Sunshine State’s status as the coronavirus hotspot of the nation, but the Florida Department of Health jumped on it. “The daily case counts for Florida currently posted on the CDC COVID-19 Tracker are incorrect,” it wrote in a tweet shortly after midnight. Instead of the 28,317 new cases that the CDC said Florida logged on Sunday, it said the actual number was 15,319. One of the state’s leading epidemiologists said it appears the federal agency made a simple math error.
“With COVID-19 cases rising in Florida, what numbers can you count on?” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida has gained national attention as the state contributing the most new COVID-19 cases to the U.S. count. But tracking the state’s COVID-19 data became complicated, with discrepancies between figures provided by the Florida Department of Health and published by the CDC. And on Tuesday, after a frenzy of social media accusations because of an apparent record-setting pandemic day in Florida, the CDC and the Florida DOH adjusted all the COVID-19 case counts and death tallies dating back to March 2020, which are displayed on the CDC site and collected by the state Department of Health.
“‘Big experiment’: DeSantis says impacts of mask-wearing on youth are unknown” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — DeSantis described student mask mandates as a “big experiment” with possible health and developmental consequences on youth. Speaking to reporters in Surfside, DeSantis criticized the “big experiment” and defended his decision to block mask mandates on school grounds. “A lot of parents have come to me … and said this has been very difficult on their young kids,” DeSantis told reporters in Surfside. Among his reasons, DeSantis said the impacts of long-term mask-wearing are unknown. He criticized the National Institutes of Health, suggesting the federal agency should explore the consequences of COVID-19 mitigation efforts.
“As kids return to school, most Florida counties report COVID-19 cases four times higher than last year” via Jayme Fraser and Mike Sutcka of USA Today — Most Florida children are returning to school in areas where COVID-19 outbreaks are far more intense than they were when school started last year. In most counties, cases are at least four times higher than a year ago, an analysis shows. Five counties report a more than tenfold increase. Cases among children are surging, too, raising questions about the health consequences of students returning to campuses and a state ban on school mask mandates while vaccines are available for only some of the schoolchildren.
“Florida requests 300 ventilators from federal government as COVID-19 cases keep rising” via Sanela Sabovic of Local 10 News — As a result of the increase in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations, the state of Florida requested 300 ventilators from the federal government. The request was made on Friday “to replace expended state stores,” the document said. The ventilators were expected to be delivered on Monday, though it was not said how they will be allocated. DeSantis said he was not aware of such a request when asked about it. “I have not heard about that, so I have to check to see if that’s true or not,” he said.
“DeSantis predicts fall and winter COVID-19 wave for northern U.S.” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Vaccines might not have provided the herd immunity officials expected, and DeSantis says that means it will soon be the norther’s turn for a COVID-19 wave. Although nearly no vaccinated individuals have died or been hospitalized due to COVID-19, there have been more breakthrough cases than expected with the rise of the delta variant. Maintaining his claim that the state’s current wave is seasonal, DeSantis on Tuesday predicted a similar rise in other parts of the country outside the Sun Belt. As of Friday, 63% of Florida’s eligible population has received at least one shot. A smaller share, 53%, have received all their shots. That amounts to 46% of Floridians being fully vaccinated.
“Florida nursing homes face significant staffing challenges amid COVID-19 surge, survey shows” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — The vast majority of Florida nursing homes are facing significant staffing challenges, a new survey from the Florida Health Care Association finds. The July survey reached 310 nursing homes, and 23 assisted living facilities across the state, which revealed that 92% face staffing challenges amid the current surge of COVID-19 and the delta variant. The survey also showed that about 9 in 10 FHCA member facilities said their overall workforce situation has gotten worse since 2020. The survey found other signs of struggling nursing centers; 88% of institutions said they’d experienced staff shortages within the last month, and 52% are having to reduce admissions as a result.
“Florida’s Brightline trains to resume operations in November” via Terry Spencer of The Associated Press — Florida’s higher-speed passenger rail service Brightline announced Tuesday it will resume operating sometime in November, 20 months after it closed because of the pandemic and with safety measures that it hopes will curb a spate of fatal collisions that plagued its initial run. The privately run company, which began operations in 2017, will resume with hourly service between Miami and West Palm Beach, president Patrick Goddard said. Goddard said Brightline will require all employees to be vaccinated against COVID-19 and, following federal regulations, mandate masks for crew and passengers inside its trains and stations.
— CORONA LOCAL —
“Jacksonville-area hospitals report more than 1,200 COVID-19 hospitalizations” via Beth Reese Cravey of The Florida Times-Union — As children returned to school across Northeast Florida on Tuesday, the number of COVID-19 hospitalizations continued to rise regionally and statewide, again breaking a daily record. The number of patients being treated for the virus in Florida hospitals Tuesday was 15,169, with 3,050 of them in intensive care, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. There were 13,614 Monday. Baptist Health, the Jacksonville area’s largest hospital system, reported a slight decrease in COVID-19 hospitalizations on Tuesday compared to Monday, but Ascension St. Vincent’s and UF Health Jacksonville reported caseload increases.
“Jacksonville student got COVID-19 as a freshman. He felt fine — until he didn’t.” via Mark Woods of the Florida Times-Union — When Antonio Gonzalez tested positive for COVID-19, he and his family had taken it seriously, wearing masks, washing their hands. But he still got it. He was asymptomatic. He felt fine until a month later, when he didn’t. That’s when he tested positive again, not for COVID-19, for MIS-C (a multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children). MIS-C is a new syndrome, first identified by doctors at children’s hospitals in April 2020, that can occur after COVID-19 infection. It’s relatively rare, but it also can be quite serious, leading to severe inflammation in organs and tissues, the heart, lungs, blood vessels, kidneys, digestive system, brain, skin, eyes.
—”DeSantis ‘happy’ with COVID-19 trends in Jacksonville, thinks ‘summer wave’ may be ending” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics
“‘Florida Heroes’ one-time relief checks are on the way to first responders across Duval” via Katherine Lewin of The Florida Times-Union — DeSantis handed out checks to nearly 30 law enforcement officers with the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office today as part of the ‘Florida’s Heroes’ initiative through the Department of Economic Opportunity. The state allocated approximately $208 million to distribute one-time relief payments of up to $1,000 to over 193,000 first responders, including law enforcement officers, EMTs, firefighters and across Florida. Mayor Lenny Curry and Department of Economic Opportunity Secretary Dane Eagle also attended the news conference.
“Pinellas hits new high for COVID-19 hospital cases; positivity rate at 16.2%” via Tracey McManus of the Tampa Bay Times — Pinellas County hospitals have the highest number of patients with coronavirus than at any time since the pandemic began as the highly contagious delta variant infects mostly unvaccinated people. The county has hit a 16.2% positivity rate and 800 cases per day on a seven-day average, “the highest numbers and cases throughout the pandemic,” said Dr. Ulyee Choe, director of the Florida Department of Health in Pinellas County. That’s up from the 14% positivity rate announced by county officials a week ago.
—“Hospitals overcapacity as COVID-19 cases swamp Brevard admissions and emergency rooms” via Dave Berma, Rick Neale, Britt Kennerly and Amira Sweilem of Florida Today
—“Okaloosa County’s COVID-19 cases up 47.4%; Florida cases surge 21.7%” via Mike Stucka of USA Today Network
“Lee Health sets a record of 455 patients with COVID-19 as delta variant surge continues” via Liz Freeman of the Naples Daily News — Lee Health set a record Tuesday with 455 patients hospitalized with COVID-19, while the caseload at the NCH Healthcare System dipped slightly. The publicly operated hospital system in Lee County saw an 8.6% increase in hospitalized patients from Monday’s tally of 419 patients. The previous record was 372 cases during last summer’s surge on July 20, 2020. The Florida Hospital Association reported 14,787 people are inpatients at hospitals with the virus, increasing 1,173 from Monday. Lee Health’s president and chief executive officer, Dr. Larry Antonucci, held a media conference Tuesday to discuss back-to-school safety for parents as the delta variant is infecting school-age children.
“Ambulances wait outside Tampa Bay hospitals as COVID-19 infections spread” via The Associated Press — COVID-19 cases have filled so many Florida hospital beds that ambulance services and fire departments are straining to respond to emergencies. In St. Petersburg, some patients wait inside ambulances for up to an hour before hospitals can admit them, a process that usually takes about 15 minutes, Pinellas County Administrator Barry Burton said. While ambulances sit outside emergency rooms, they are essentially off the grid. “They’re not available to take another call, which forces the fire department on scene at an accident or something to take that transport. That’s caused quite a backlog for the system.”
—“Vaccines available at funeral of unvaccinated Central Florida man, 28, who died of COVID-19” via Tiffini Theisen of the Orlando Sentinel
“West Melbourne woman, 30, dies of COVID-19 days after giving birth to her daughter” via Rick Neale of Florida Today — Weakened and hospitalized with COVID-19, West Melbourne resident Kristen McMullen gave birth to her tiny daughter, Summer Reign, via emergency C-section on July 27. She could only cradle her newborn for a few fleeting moments. “She was able to hold Summer for basically just two pictures,” said Melissa Syverson, McMullen’s aunt. McMullen, “a 30-year-old bright, beautiful, vivacious girl with the world ahead of her,” died of COVID-19 Friday at Holmes Regional Medical Center in Melbourne, Syverson said.
— STATEWIDE —
“Florida remains in cone of uncertainty for system expected to become Tropical Storm Fred” via Joe Mario Pedersen and Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — Heavy rain dumped over Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands as a tropical disturbance pushed northwest toward Florida with the potential to become Tropical Storm Fred. As of 5 p.m., the NHC’s updated advisory for “Potential Tropical Cyclone Six” still says it’s likely to become Tropical Storm Fred late Tuesday or early Wednesday with a 90% confidence that it will do so in the next 48 hours. Despite it not being named yet, the NHC said tropical-storm-force squalls had been reported over the Leeward Islands this afternoon.
Nikki Fried water quality initiative criticized by some — Agriculture Commissioner Fried has been talking up a water quality initiative across the state, but some environmentalists say the policy doesn’t go far enough. As reported by Bruce Ritchie of POLITICO Florida, the policy touted by Fried comes from a wide-ranging water quality bill that lawmakers passed last year with support from agriculture and industry groups as well as some environmental organizations. The Sierra Club was not one of the backers. “I don’t want to be pessimistic. If she were actually going to do something that will make a difference wouldn’t she spell it out?” said Cris Costello, a Sierra Club representative. Former Office of Agriculture Water Policy director Rich Budell countered, saying the changes “are quite significant. I don’t know of any other state in the country doing this. It is pretty progressive.”
“Shevrin Jones reports mistreatment from white Delta Air Lines employee at Orlando airport” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Jones, a Florida Senator who represents South Broward, said a baggage issue Monday resulted in racist treatment from a Delta Air Lines employee at Orlando International Airport. Jones, a Democrat, is Black. He said the Delta employee is white. “So, here’s my thing: I try my best not to automatically jump to the extreme of calling anybody a racist or all that other stuff,” Jones said Monday afternoon in a telephone interview. “But the unfortunate part here is, given the nature of how she responded to me at the moment, it was blatant,” Jones said. “No one should be treated in that manner. Nobody.” Jones posted about the incident on Twitter.
“No more boom. Florida population growth slows to 1%. Fewer transplants find Florida appealing” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — Down here, you can get all the physical beauty and sunshine of the Caribbean, except with fewer assassinations and civil wars. This has given every Florida politician in history an easy (and lazy) way to defend even their worst decisions. They argue: If people don’t like what I’m doing, why are so many moving here? Well, here’s our new reality: People aren’t coming here. At least not the way they used to. Once as high as 6% and 8% annually, Florida’s population growth has dwindled closer to 1%. That’s still better than most states. But 1% for a place like Florida is pretty anemic.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Lauren Book says Andrew Cuomo did the ‘right thing’ by resigning after harassment allegations” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Book, a survivor of sexual assault, says New York Gov. Cuomo made the right decision in stepping down Tuesday after he was accused of sexual harassment by several women. Cuomo was also facing an investigation into whether he improperly used state resources to write a book detailing his response to the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition, Cuomo attracted scrutiny after his administration was accused of providing misleading information regarding COVID-19 deaths in New York nursing homes.
“Chris Sprowls laments ‘devastating’ manatee die-off in meeting with scientists” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Sprowls took a boat tour with scientists Tuesday to discuss manatee health and red tide in Florida. The meeting comes as environmental factors such as algae blooms threaten the safety of Florida’s marine life and sea cow populations. According to the Speaker’s Office, 880 manatees have died so far this year. By comparison, the previous record was 830 manatee deaths in all of 2013. “The number of manatee deaths this year and the impacts of red tide on residents, tourism and the environment are devastating,” said Sprowls. Sprowls met with scientists from Clearwater Marine Aquarium. The group also explored the reaching impacts of algae blooms on resources in the Gulf of Mexico.
AHCA requests approval for postpartum Medicaid expansion — The Agency of Health Care Administration has requested the Medicaid waiver to lengthen the duration of Medicaid benefits for new mothers, Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida reports. The expansion, a top priority of House Speaker Sprowls last Session, would increase new mothers’ Medicaid benefit duration from 60 days to one year. For the policy to go into effect, the Centers of Medicare and Medicaid Services needs to approve definition changes and extend the income-based requirements to allow new mothers to apply. Ann Dalton, acting bureau chief for Medicaid Policy, said Monday that there is no timeline for approval of the request.
Happening today — The Revenue Estimating Conference will examine slot machine and Indian gaming revenues, 1:30 p.m., 117 Knott Building.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Michael Corcoran, Jacqueline Corcoran, Matt Blair, Will Rodriguez, Andrea Tovar, Corcoran Partners: Estate of Molly Parker, Julia Perez and Julia Perez Trust, Maury Hernandez
Brian Ballard, Ballard Partners: Tampa General Hospital
Sara Bremer: University of Florida
Jon Brooker: Ocean Conservancy
Carl Eldred, Michael Petrovich, Hopping Green & Sams: Florida Electric Power Coordinating Group
Nick Iarossi, Kenneth Granger, Dean Izzo, Capital City Consulting: Pichard Holdings, Motorola Solutions
Zach Hubbard, Rubin Turnbull & Associates: HCA Healthcare
Cameron Pennant: Charlotte County
Alan Suskey, Suskey Consulting: Syntech Systems
— 2022 —
“DeSantis rakes in cash as Florida’s COVID-19 wars rage” via Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida — DeSantis has built a national political brand. Need proof? Just look at his political committee’s more than $4 million July haul. DeSantis, who has not yet formally declared his 2022 reelection bid, last month brought in political contributions from every state in the country, several United States territories, as well as from members of the military serving overseas, according to campaign finance records. DeSantis’ nearly 400-page July campaign finance report represents a massive expansion of DeSantis’ fundraising footprint, driven by his increased use of email to solicit contributions. The recent support is fueled, in part, by DeSantis’ hands-off response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Governor’s July haul included 18,201 individual contributions; more than 17,000 of those were from small-dollar donors chipping in $100 or less. Before July, the average donation to the committee was $8,000. Last month it was $233. Overall, Friends of Ron DeSantis showed $4.3 million raised for the month and entered August with more than $40 million on hand.
“Fried predicts a big drop for DeSantis poll numbers” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics —“ I’ve seen a couple of polls actually recently that have shown him dropping 10, 15 points. And I would say that will continue to happen. Because as this individual is running for President of the United States in 2024, we see that in all of his policies,” Fried said. “And so, he is stepping on the backs of Floridians and now our children in order to get votes for President in 2024,” Fried said, referring to the Governor’s threats to defund officials in school districts that require masks. For Fried, the delta variant has offered a reversal of fortune compared to DeSantis. The Governor is doing fewer prime-time media hits as hospital capacity is strained in the state.
“Florida won’t appeal block of ‘John Morgan’ law; 2022 drives have already piled up cash” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — Ashley Moody won’t appeal a federal court ruling knocking down a new law capping donations to political committees pushing ballot measures, allowing large donations to flow. But the ruling might not affect the ongoing 2022 ballot drives because of big checks already written to them. Judge Allen Winsor issued a temporary injunction against SB 1890 on July 1, the day it was slated to take effect, preventing the Florida Elections Commission from enforcing its prohibition against individual donations of more than $3,000. The deadline to appeal the ruling passed last week.
“Gambling committees raise little, spend big in July” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Florida Education Champions, a joint effort between DraftKings and Fan Duel, added just $87 in July and spent $3.4 million. It has $16.43 million left in the tank. Florida Voters in Charge, backed by Las Vegas Sands, showed no income and $3.8 million in spending. It closed out July with $13.27 million on hand. Magic City Casino’s favored committee, People Against Regulatory Legislation Addressing You, laid an egg last month and didn’t spend anything either. It started with a $15 million deposit in June. Meanwhile, the Seminole Tribe of Florida has yet to report finance numbers for the new Voters in Control committee to oppose gambling expansions. It had $10 million banked on June 30.
“Clay Yarborough scores endorsements from Cord Byrd, Jason Fischer, ending SD 4 drama” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — “I am committed to working with our Republican leaders from throughout our state to protect Florida’s position as the freest and most prosperous state in the country. And while my service won’t be in the Florida Senate, I do look forward to working with Senate President (Wilton) Simpson, Sen. Kathleen Passidomo, and the Senate conference in protecting our conservative values and principles,” Byrd said. A similar comment was offered from Fischer, who had raised a million dollars for a run that will not happen, for Senate at least. Yarborough is also endorsed by Simpson, Passidomo, and Sens. Jennifer Bradley and Travis Hutson. He has roughly $450,000 banked for a drama-free waltz toward 2022’s election.
“Ed Hooper to kick off reelection run with Aug. 24 fundraiser” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Sen. Hooper will get his reelection campaign rolling with a fundraiser in his Clearwater-based district later this month. An invitation to the event shows a long list of current and former elected leaders who will be at Island Way Grill on the evening of Aug. 24. The headliners: Simpson, House Speaker Sprowls and Rules Chair Passidomo, set to take over for Simpson after the 2022 election. The list also includes Republican Sen. Ben Albritton, who is jockeying with Sen. Manny Diaz Jr. to become Senate President for the 2024-26 term. Hooper has held the District 16 seat in the Senate since 2018.
“Rick King leads HD 88 fundraising race for second straight month” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — King raised nearly $14,000 for the second straight month, which once again puts him atop the House District 88 field in terms of fundraising. Jervonte Edmonds, competing against King for the Democratic nomination, raised just over $7,000 in July. Former Palm Beach Supervisor of Elections candidate Paulette Armstead filed to run as a Democrat but is no longer listed as an HD 88 candidate on the Division of Elections website. That leaves Edmonds and King to face off for the Democratic nomination in the race to replace Democratic state Rep. Omari Hardy, who is running for Congress. Hardy’s resignation will trigger a Special Election to replace him in HD 88, though the date of that election has not yet been set.
“Hillary Cassel adds more than $13K in July, grows money advantage” via Hillary Cassel of Florida Politics — Cassel brought in more than $13,000 in July, besting her Democratic competitors and expanding her cash lead in the race for House District 99. Jeremy Katzman, an administrator at Nova Southeastern University’s Health Professions Division, raised a little more than $3,700 during the month. Barry Faske of the Florida Green Building Coalition collected just $1,000. Cassel has raised just over $179,000 in outside contributions since filing for the race in late February. She’s also put in $50,000 of her own cash, though that loan could be returned to the candidate if unspent. Still, as of July 31, Cassel had nearly $188,000 in available cash.
“Terry McAuliffe took $100K from billionaire with ties to Harvey Weinstein” via Houston Keene of Fox News — Former Virginia Gov. McAuliffe, campaigning to recapture his old seat, took $100,000 from a billionaire who defended Weinstein. McAuliffe took the six-figure donation in April from Paul Tudor Jones, a billionaire hedge fund manager who was a close ally of Weinstein’s and a board member of the Hollywood convicted rapist’s production company, The Weinstein Company. Jones told Weinstein that he loved him in an email and said, “America loves a great comeback story,” and the allegations “will go away sooner than you think,” The New York Times revealed in 2017.
— CORONA NATION —
“Teachers should be required to get COVID-19 vaccines, Dr. Anthony Fauci says” via Jennifer Jacobs of Bloomberg — Fauci, the top U.S. infectious disease expert, said state and local governments should require teachers to get vaccinated against COVID-19. As back-to-school season approaches and the delta variant surges across the U.S., Fauci acknowledged that his position might anger some people who’ve resisted vaccine mandates for teachers. “Yeah, I’m going to upset some people on this, but I think we should,” he said. “This is very serious business. You would wish that people would see why it’s so important to get vaccinated.” But Fauci said there wouldn’t be federal mandates for teacher vaccinations. Local mandates “for schools, for teachers, for universities, for colleges” would be appropriate, he said.
“Vaccination status has Americans picking sides” via Ray A. Smith of The Wall Street Journal — Day-to-day interactions are growing increasingly fraught as individuals grapple with how much to ask others about their vaccination status — and what to do if they hear an answer that makes them uncomfortable. Some employers are starting to mandate vaccination before people return to workplaces, but many more workers face office return dates with no such rules. Americans who have opted not to get the shots cite many reasons for holding off, from political beliefs to unease with such new treatments. Some unvaccinated people who were interviewed for this story say they have legitimate medical questions.
“Vaccine side effects remain rare and are outweighed by benefits of vaccination, the CDC reported.” via Emily Anthes of The New York Times — For adults, the benefits of the three coronavirus vaccines authorized in the United States outweigh the risks of serious side effects, which remain rare, according to a new report from the CDC. The Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines have been linked to inflammation of the heart muscle, known as myocarditis, and the Johnson & Johnson vaccine may increase the risk of a rare blood-clotting disorder and a neurological condition known as Guillain-Barré syndrome. All of the conditions can be serious, but remain uncommon. Experts concluded that these small risks are exceeded by the benefits of the vaccines, which provide powerful protection against disease and death.
“High trust in doctors, nurses in U.S., AP-NORC poll finds” via Emily Swanson and Tom Murphy of The Associated Press — Most Americans have high trust in doctors, nurses and pharmacists, a new poll finds. Researchers say that trust could become important in the push to increase COVID-19 vaccinations, as long as unvaccinated people have care providers they know and are open to hearing new information about the vaccines. At least 7 in 10 Americans trust doctors, nurses and pharmacists to do what’s right for them and their families either most or all of the time. The poll shows high levels of trust among both Democrats and Republicans, men and women, and white, Black and Hispanic Americans.
“Inside the White House-Facebook rift over vaccine misinformation” via Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Cecilia Kang of The New York Times — White House officials had been meeting with Facebook to urge the company to stop the spread of misinformation about the coronavirus vaccines. The White House grew so frustrated by Facebook’s answers in meetings that at one point, it demanded to hear from the data scientists at the company instead of lobbyists. Facebook has pushed back strongly against the White House’s criticism, accusing the administration in public of scapegoating the company for the administration’s failure to reach its vaccination goals. He said the social network worked with the White House for “many months” to get people vaccinated, introducing features like prominent links to vaccine clinics.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“More businesses could follow Norwegian Cruise Line and require vaccines” via Ron Hurtibise of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Norwegian Cruise Line could be clearing the way for businesses across the U.S. to require customers to show proof of vaccination before being served. Attorneys looking into a federal district judge’s ruling on Sunday allowing Norwegian to require vaccination of all future passengers said the ruling, if upheld, could set a precedent that could strike down laws in several states barring businesses from requiring “vaccine passports.” If that’s the result of Norwegian’s challenge of Florida’s vaccine passport ban, it would be a huge political setback for DeSantis, rumored to be considering a presidential run in 2024, and other Republican Governors who have enacted passport bans to appeal to mostly conservative, vaccine-resistant constituents.
“Will the pandemic productivity boom last?” via Neil Irwin of The New York Times — Since the pandemic recession bottomed out in the spring of 2020, the nation’s gross domestic product has more than fully recovered, with second-quarter output 0.8% higher than before coronavirus. The number of jobs decreased 4.4% in the same span. Productivity growth accounts for most of the wedge between those. What is less clear, though, is how much this growth represents real progress toward deploying the workforce in ways that will make Americans richer over time. It’s a murky story — like any attempt to connect big-picture productivity numbers to what’s happening in the guts of the economy — but crucial for understanding the economic outlook for the 2020s. There are several parts to the story, and each has different implications for the future.
“South Florida renters behind on payments by almost $5,000 each” via Amber Randall of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — South Florida renters will need about $5,000 per household to catch up on past-due payments, according to new estimates. Between 13% and 17% of renters in the tri-county area are behind, according to U.S. Census Bureau data analyzed by Surgo Ventures, a nonprofit organization. In Palm Beach County, about 13% of renters are behind on rent. For Broward County, it’s about 16%, and in Miami-Dade, a little under 17%, estimates show. “Our models have consistently shown that if someone in the household became unemployed during the pandemic, they are much more likely to be behind; on average, their odds are about 3 times higher than someone who did not lose employment,” said Aaron Dibner-Dunlap of Surgo Ventures.
— MORE CORONA —
“Delta is bad news for kids” via Katherine J. Wu of The Atlantic — As the hyper-transmissible Delta variant hammers the United States, the greatest hardships are being taken on by the unvaccinated, a population that includes some 50 million children younger than age 12. Across the country, pediatric cases of COVID-19 are skyrocketing alongside cases among nonimmunized adults; child hospitalizations have now reached an all-time pandemic high. In several states, health workers say that kids, many of them previously completely healthy, are coming in sicker and deteriorating faster than ever before, with no obvious end in sight. But the recent rash of illnesses among the nation’s youngest is a sobering reminder of the COVID-19 adage that lower risk is not no-risk.
—”D.C. mask mandate may be in effect through Thanksgiving if vaccinations don’t increase” via Mark Segraves of NBC Washington
“CDC study of Kentuckians disputes Rand Paul, Thomas Massie claims about COVID-19 immunity” via Deborah Yetter of the Louisville Courier-Journal — Two Republican members of Congress from Kentucky, Sen. Paul and Rep. Massie, have steadfastly refused to get the COVID-19 vaccine, saying they have natural immunity because they had the viral infection. But a new study from the CDC, based on data from people in Kentucky who contracted COVID-19 a second time, says the vaccine boosts immunity in people who have had the virus. Unvaccinated people who contracted COVID-19 are more than twice as likely to catch it again than those who got vaccinated after contracting the virus, it said.
“Europe reopened to Americans. Why, it asks, hasn’t the U.S. reciprocated?” via Nicholas Casey of The New York Times — In June, European Union leaders recommended that member countries reopen their borders to Americans, a significant gesture. They expected to be repaid in kind. But nearly two months later, even as Europe has overtaken the United States in vaccinations, America’s borders remain closed to most European travelers, even ones with vaccinations. That the United States remains largely closed has dismayed Europeans and frustrated their leaders, who are demanding that Europe’s decision to open its borders be reciprocated.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Joe Biden considering intervening in DeSantis mask mandate ban” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Biden says the White House is researching whether he has the authority to intervene in bans on mask mandates, such as the one DeSantis has ordered for Florida schools. Classes started in some Florida school districts Tuesday, and more schools are expected to open throughout the week. However, several school districts will require masks for students anyway, and the DeSantis administration has threatened to withhold the salaries of state administrators who implement those policies against his orders. The White House is looking for ways to support school board members and superintendents who break state law to follow the federal guidance, but Biden downplayed his options.
“White House plans to fund Florida schools who defy DeSantis’ order against mask mandates” via Nathaniel Rodriguez of WFLA — The White House announced Tuesday that it is planning to support schools who defy DeSantis’ executive order and enact mask mandates for students. Under current rules from the Florida Department of Education, Florida school districts can only enact mask mandates if they give parents an option for their children to opt out, which keeps mask-wearing optional. DeSantis’ order states that if a district disobeys and forces mask-wearing at its schools, the FDOE could pull state funding to make them comply.
“Vacation interrupted: Biden’s getaway plans shift by the day” via Jonathan Lemire and Aamer Adhani of The Associated Press — Biden’s vacation plans, like those of so many Americans during this national summer of uncertainty, keep changing. But while concerns about the resurgence of the coronavirus have caused Biden’s plans to shift, the biggest complicating factor was the world’s greatest deliberating body’s commitment to, well, deliberation. The president had hoped to begin his two-week summer vacation this week, but as negotiations dragged on last week, Biden decamped for his Wilmington, Delaware, home for the weekend, with officials planning a Sunday night return to mark the bill’s passage. The shifting schedule, which changed by the day, upended the plans of aides and reporters alike, many of whom were forced to hurriedly extend hotel stays and purchase an extra set of clothes.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Donald Trump’s election conspiracies are coming to a head — again” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — There’s only one actual question about the next few weeks, as the estimated deadline offered by Trump and his allies for his reinstatement as President comes and goes: How dangerous will it be? On Friday, the Department of Homeland Security released a bulletin warning state and local law enforcement officials of increasing chatter about potential violence that “may occur during August 2021.” Nothing was mentioned, but an official noted that the department was warning because of how quickly a threat could emerge. The warning stemmed from threats “fueled in large part by conspiracy theories and other false narratives” that are spread by “domestic extremist thought leaders,” among others.
“House Democrats won’t have a shot at getting Trump’s tax returns from the IRS until at least November” via Katelyn Polantz of CNN — The Biden administration won’t be turning over Trump‘s tax returns to the House until at least November, despite the recent dramatic Justice Department opinion that the IRS “must” hand them over. A federal judge will hear arguments then on whether Trump can block the tax returns’ release. The scheduling development puts one of two major ongoing court cases over access to Trump’s tax returns on ice for the foreseeable future. Last week, the Biden administration told Judge Trevor McFadden, a Trump appointee on the DC District Court, that the Treasury Department believes it should turn over Trump’s tax returns “promptly” to the House Ways and Means Committee.
— CRISIS —
“Man charged in Jan. 6 assault on Capitol police officer Brian D. Sicknick ordered released” via Spencer S. Hsu of The Washington Post — A three-judge appeals court panel has ordered the release of West Virginia sandwich shop owner George Tanios pending trial in the Jan. 6 chemical-spray assault on three police officers including Sicknick, who died the following day after suffering two strokes. A lower court “clearly erred in its individualized assessment of appellant’s dangerousness,” the judges from the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit said in an order filed Monday night. The court gave prosecutors seven days to appeal or seek a rehearing before the full appeals court. The ruling came two weeks after a different three-judge panel of the same appeals court upheld the continuing detention of Tanios’s co-defendant, Julian Khater.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Senate passes $1 trillion infrastructure bill, handing Biden a bipartisan win” via Emily Cochrane of The New York Times — The vote, 69 to 30, was uncommonly bipartisan. The yes votes included Sen. Mitch McConnell and 18 others from his party. “This historic investment in infrastructure is what I believe you, the American people, want, what you’ve been asking for for a long, long time,” Biden said. With $550 billion in new federal spending, the measure would provide $65 billion to expand high-speed internet access; $110 billion for roads, bridges and other projects; $25 billion for airports; and the most funding for Amtrak since the passenger rail service was founded in 1971. It would also renew and revamp existing infrastructure and transportation programs set to expire at the end of September.
AFP-FL praises Rick Scott, Marco Rubio for vote against infrastructure plan — The U.S. Senate passed the bipartisan $1 trillion infrastructure bill, a top Biden priority, but it did so without a vote from U.S. Sens. Rubio or Scott. That netted them a commendation from Americans for Prosperity-Florida. “This ‘infrastructure’ proposal is simply a down payment on Sen. Bernie Sanders‘ $3.5 wasteful spending package,” state director Skylar Zander said. “Americans for Prosperity activists across Florida thank Senators Rubio and Scott for siding with taxpayers, instead of Washington special interests. This fight is far from over, and as this package moves to the House, AFP will continue to encourage members to oppose this wasteful spending spree.”
“Watchdog sues FEC for closing investigation into Scott, allied super PAC” via Karl Evers-Hillstrom of The Hill — A watchdog group on Monday sued the Federal Election Commission for dismissing a complaint alleging that Sen. Scott unlawfully used a super PAC to support his 2018 Senate run. In a federal lawsuit filed on behalf of Democratic group End Citizens United, Campaign Legal Center Action challenged the decision by Republican FEC commissioners to close an investigation into Scott against the recommendation of the agency’s nonpartisan lawyers. End Citizens United had alleged that Scott and the New Republican PAC, a group he formerly chaired, violated election laws prohibiting coordination between candidates and outside groups.
“Ted Cruz calls for ‘zero’ coronavirus mandates, while Paul urges defiance amid delta variant surge” via Timothy Bella of The Washington Post — As a resurgent coronavirus is forcing states to address soaring cases and hospitalizations, Sens. Cruz and Paul denounced health mandates against the virus at a time when the nation recorded its highest single-day number of new cases since January. The United States reported nearly 160,000 cases on Monday, pushing the seven-day average to almost 115,000 daily. It was the most severe day for new cases in the country since Jan. 29, when coronavirus vaccines were not widely available. Hospitalizations are also up to nearly 70,000 as businesses and schools grapple with mandates for vaccinations and masks during the fourth wave of the pandemic.
“From Britney Spears to political rivals, Joel Greenberg searched scores of names on confidential database” via Martin E. Comas and Jason Garcia of Florida Politics — Greenberg used a confidential database to look up the personal information of fellow elected officials, political rivals, county employees, family members and even celebrities newly released records show. The names of hundreds that Greenberg pried into, ranging from U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, his friend who is reportedly the target of a sex-trafficking investigation, to his mother and even the elderly father of a rival county commissioner, reveals the extent to which the former tax collector apparently abused his access to the Driver and Vehicle Information Database beginning in August 2017 and continuing until just days before he was arrested and resigned from office in mid-June 2020.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“J.T. Burnette told agents bribes were good business in Tallahassee, tells prosecutors it was bravado” via Jeff Burlew of the Tallahassee Democrat — The public corruption trial of Burnette entered its 12th day of testimony, with the defendant facing a grueling day of grilling by federal prosecutors during cross-examination. Burnette, an owner of the DoubleTree Hotel and several other companies, is accused of arranging bribes for former Tallahassee City Commissioner Scott Maddox. On Monday, he denied involvement in any bribery scheme during direct questioning from Tim Jansen, his lead attorney. Maddox and his girlfriend and business partner, Paige Carter-Smith, were indicted in 2018 for accepting bribes from prominent city vendors in exchange for his official action.
Tweet, tweet:
“Residents of Miami condo forced to evacuate. ‘We felt the building occupants were not safe’” via Carli Teproff of the Miami Herald — An eight-story condo building in Miami was evacuated Monday night after city officials deemed the structure “unsafe.” The city said that the 138-unit building, 5050 NW Seventh St. in Flagami, was put on notice regarding several violations on July 7th. Among the violations: Not obtaining 40-year recertification. “We felt the building occupants were not safe,” added Building Director Asael “Ace” Marrero. Late into the night, residents were lugging their belongings to the packed parking lot as police cars were in the front of the building. The condo association could not be reached for comment.
“Miami Beach fines itself after city-owned buildings miss 40-year recertification” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — The Surfside condo collapse has led local governments in Miami-Dade County to pay closer attention to older buildings that are overdue for county-mandated safety checks. In Miami Beach, that process has also involved looking in the mirror. Five city-owned buildings are currently in violation of a 40-year recertification requirement: the administrative building at 1701 Meridian Ave., the South Shore Community Center at 833 Sixth St., the shuttered Byron Carlyle Theater at 500 71st St., a Fleet Management building at 140 MacArthur Causeway and a parking garage at 400 W. 42nd St.
“After tumor surgery, Jose ‘Pepe’ Diaz home recovering, ‘in good spirits’” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Diaz is home and “in good spirits” after undergoing surgery last week to remove a benign tumor near his brain, his office said in a press note Monday. “Chairman Diaz would like to thank the entire staff at Jackson Memorial Hospital for their incredible work,” staff wrote. Diaz had a scheduled, nonemergency operation Thursday to excise an acoustic neuroma, a noncancerous and usually slow-growing tumor that develops on a cranial nerve connecting the inner ear to the brain. The surgery was a success, Diaz’s chief of staff, Isidoro Lopez, told Florida Politics on Friday.
“2 Palm Beach County judges, 6 lawyers among those who could replace Circuit Judge Krista Marx” via Jane Musgrave of the Palm Beach Post — Two Palm Beach County judges are among the six lawyers who have been tapped as possible replacements for Circuit Judge Marx, who retired on July 31. County Judges Bradley Harper and Melanie Surber are on the shortlist that was sent to DeSantis on Tuesday. Harper was elected to the county bench in 2016, and Surber was appointed by DeSantis in December 2019. Others nominated by the local Judicial Nominating for Marx’s seat are April Bristow, general counsel for the 15th Judicial Circuit; Assistant State Attorney Lauren Godden Burke; Assistant Public Defender Schnelle Tonge; and Stephanie Tew, a statewide prosecutor who works in the attorney general’s West Palm Beach office.
“Attorneys for school shooter want pretrial hearings closed” via Terry Spencer of The Associated Press — Attorneys for the suspect in a 2018 Florida high school massacre told a judge the news media and public should be barred from all pretrial hearings, saying Nikolas Cruz’s right to an impartial jury will be irrevocably harmed if certain evidence is revealed before jurors are seated. Chief assistant public defender David Wheeler told Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer that discussing during open pretrial hearings evidence that might be excluded or barred would “let the cat out of the bag” and create news coverage that would prejudice the potential juror pool. Wheeler said the public’s view of Cruz has already been tainted by news coverage.
“Compliance checks of sex offenders yield more than a dozen arrests in St. Lucie County” via Will Greenlee of Treasure Coast Newspapers — Sixteen people were arrested and two more are being sought after the St. Lucie County Sheriff’s Office and U.S. Marshals Service officials made compliance checks on more than 555 sex offenders in the county, officials said Tuesday. The checks are performed continually throughout the year, though Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Brian Hester said some of the timing of this initiative related to the start of school Tuesday. “Our kids in our community are our most valuable asset,” Hester said. “We tend to, a lot of times during the summer months right before school, do these operations.” Hester said the initiative, dubbed Operation Watchful Eye, ran from June 14 to July 30 and was in three phases.
“Pensacola could end requirement for adult entertainment workers to register with city” via Jim Little of the Pensacola News Journal — Pensacola is considering doing away with a long-standing regulation that requires adult entertainment workers to get a permit from the Pensacola Police Department to work at venues in city limits. On Monday, Pensacola Mayor Grover Robinson told the City Council that after discussion with police officials, his administration agreed the regulation was not serving any purpose. “We certainly don’t do this to anybody else in a variety of other (industries), and the police were happy to move out of this,” Robinson said. Robinson’s administration is proposing to repeal the requirement for adult entertainment workers to get a permit to work in the city, but to keep all of the other regulations dealing with adult entertainment venues.
“Former Gulf Breeze Mayor pleads no contest to recording teens in shower, may avoid prison” via Colin Warren-Hicks of the Pensacola News Journal — Former Gulf Breeze Mayor Ed Gray will be sentenced later this month on charges related to secretly recording teenage boys undressing at his home and tracking their movements in some cases. Gray pleaded no contest July 6 to 11 charges in the case, including eight counts of video voyeurism, one count of illegal interception of communications, one count of illegally installing a tracking device, and one count of stalking. His sentencing has been set for Aug. 24. Assistant State Attorney Fredrick Longmire said it is unlikely Gray will be sentenced to state prison on the charges, citing Gray’s low score of 10 on the Florida criminal scoresheet.
— TOP OPINION —
“Why our school district is defying Florida’s ban on mask mandates — even if it means we lose funding” via Carlee Simon of The Washington Post — As superintendent of Alachua County Public Schools in North Central Florida, I am committed to providing high-quality education while protecting the health and well-being of nearly 35,000 students and staff members. That’s proved to be an enormous challenge in my state. Just a few weeks ago, my district was planning for a more “normal” school year free from many of the safety restrictions of the past year. But a surge in COVID-19 cases has upended those plans, at least temporarily. And unfortunately, DeSantis refuses to take the steps necessary to address the surge. Even worse, he’s preventing local leaders from doing what they can to protect their own communities.
— OPINIONS —
“Anti-vax insanity” via Charles M. Blow of The New York Times — Nothing better exemplifies the gaping political divide in this country than our embarrassing and asinine vaccine response. Trump’s scorched earth political strategy has fooled millions of Americans into flirting with death. And now thousands are once again dying for it. Almost from the beginning, efforts to combat the virus were met with disdain from a president who felt the crisis made him look bad. The science was denied. We should all have been celebrating in the streets and running to a lifesaving serum with our sleeves rolled up and a smile on our face. But not enough of us were. The public had been poisoned by partisanship. Masking was a political statement. Social distancing was a political statement. Receiving the vaccine, for far too many, was a political statement.
“After a federal casino cop-out, it’s up to courts to quash Seminole gambling deal” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — The feds have greenlighted the gambling deal between Florida and the Seminole Tribe. Now, the best chance of overturning this compact and restoring the state’s constitutional order rests with the courts. After a 45-day review, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, which has the say over gambling deals between states and tribes, allowed the compact to go forward without explicitly approving it. And yet, the approval also did not explicitly or implicitly address the hard truth that the deal between Florida and the Seminole Tribe has every appearance of violating the Florida Constitution.
“Melanie Brown-Woofter: Addressing mental health on a national stage” via Florida Politics — Most recently, champion gymnast Simone Biles put her mental wellness first during the 2021 Tokyo Olympics and publicly spoke out about her mental health. As a clinical nurse and president and CEO of the Florida Behavioral Health Association (FBHA), I thank anyone who has ever spoken out about his or her mental health. Because of superstars like Biles, the conversation on mental health and wellness is now on the national stage. If you or a loved one is suffering from mental health issues or substance use disorders, there are trained mental health and substance use professionals in your area. You can find our members’ crisis lines on the FBHA website at www.floridabha.org. The National Suicide Hotline is 1-800-273-8255.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Democrats in the House are urging school boards to ignore the Governor’s ban on school mask mandates and stand up for student safety. But DeSantis says parents need to make that decision … not school boards and superintendents.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Are there limits when your choice affects other children?
— Meanwhile, more school districts say they will ignore the Governor’s orders against mask mandates. The latest is Broward County.
— DeSantis and the CDC are disputing some new case numbers, and the result could be the resumption of daily COVID-19 reports by the Florida Department of Health.
— The Governor starts handing out bonus checks to law enforcement.
— And finally, a Florida man got lost on a golf cart. He was searching for a Chili’s but ended up in jail.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Getting bigger: Bitcoin 2022 conference to be held at Miami Beach Convention Center” via Rob Wile of the Miami Herald — The Miami Beach Convention Center will host next year’s annual Bitcoin Conference to accommodate the thousands of guests expected to celebrate cryptocurrencies. In April, this year’s conference, held at the Mana Wynwood convention space, drew at least 12,000. The Beach space’s main hall is about five times the size of Mana Wynwood’s. “The Miami Beach Convention Center is the perfect place to host next year’s Bitcoin Conference,” David Bailey, CEO of BTC Inc., said in a statement. “It will be bigger and better than ever, and we expect Bitcoin 2022 to be our most successful event yet.” No information was immediately available about next year’s speaker lineup.
“Apple readies new iPhones with pro-focused camera, video updates” via Mark Gurman of Bloomberg — Apple’s next iPhone lineup will get at least three major new camera and video-recording features, which the company is betting will be key enticements to upgrade from earlier models. The new handsets will include a video version of the phone’s Portrait mode feature, the ability to record video in a higher-quality format called ProRes, and a new filters-like system that improves the look and colors of photos. The camera features are seen as some of the biggest selling points for the iPhone 12’s successor, which is expected to be sold in the next several weeks. Beyond the camera enhancements, the new iPhones will get relatively modest upgrades.
“Goodbye Tropical Park, Santa’s Enchanted Forest is moving” via Veronica Crespo of WPLG Local 10 News — From Westchester to now, Hialeah, Santa’s Enchanted Forest has found a new home for the 2021 holiday season. According to the event website, Miami’s beloved Christmas theme park that lit up parts of Tropical Park along the Palmetto Expressway for nearly 40 years is set to reopen at Hialeah Park. In 1984, the owners of Santa’s Enchanted Forest began leasing the land from Miami-Dade County. That agreement expired in March of 2020. Park management said more than one million people visited Santa’s Enchanted Forest each year. Guests can expect to see many of the same vendors, millions of new lights, and more than 100 rides at its new space.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Celebrating today are Brice Barnes, CBS’s Jim DeFede, Chris Hart IV and Matt Surrency.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
🐪 Happy Wednesday! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,189 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
🚨 Bulletin: At 3:58 a.m., Senate Democrats passed their $3.5 trillion budget resolution — 50-49, with no Republican votes — in a key step toward President Biden’s expansion of family, health and environment programs. Final approval this fall looks certain.
Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photos: Saul Loeb/AFP, Farshad Usyan/AFP and Javeed Tanveer/AFP via Getty Images
The Taliban has stunned even seasoned military and national security officials in the U.S. government with the speed of its conquests over the past week.
- President Biden isn’t budging: He’s resolved to get out by Aug. 31, no matter what, people briefed on his thinking tell Axios’ Jonathan Swan, Zachary Basu and Glen Johnson.
Biden may not see much of a pause between his total withdrawal from Afghanistan and the country’s total collapse into a bloody civil war.
- “I do not regret my decision,” Biden told reporters yesterday.
- Biden explained: “Look, we spent over a trillion dollars over 20 years. We trained and equipped with modern equipment over 300,000 Afghan forces. … They’ve got to fight for themselves.”
The Taliban has toppled nine of Afghanistan’s 34 provincial capitals in less than a week, and now controls an estimated 65%+ of the country. (See a map.)
- The Taliban is striking with impressive speed and coordination, a senior Biden official grudgingly acknowledged. Afghans and international security are scrambling to manage the mayhem.
White House officials have privately reassured themselves by noting that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans support withdrawing troops from Afghanistan.
- Part 2 below. … Share this story.
Senior U.S. officials privately express little confidence in the Afghan security forces, Axios can report.
- These officials say military incompetence, disorganization and poor communications skills render them unable to adequately coordinate U.S. air support to protect territory from the Taliban.
A former senior U.S. intelligence officer with extensive experience in the region, who remains in touch with his former colleagues, tells Axios they’re despondent — and have accepted that Biden is “dug in” and that resistance is “futile.”
- Pentagon spokesman John Kirby, at a press conference on Monday, said of the Afghan security forces: “[I]t’s their country to defend now; this is their struggle.”
Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.), who serves on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, told Axios he discussed the situation in Afghanistan on Monday with Secretary of State Tony Blinken, and there’s “no chance” Biden changes his troop withdrawal strategy.
- The committee’s chairman, Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), told Axios he respects Biden but disagrees vehemently with the plan. “He doesn’t want to have an endless war; I get that,” Menendez said. “But I always thought that a contingency would have stemmed the tide. … The president has to consider whether what’s happening is what he envisioned.”
- Still, many Democrats support the withdrawal. Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) told Axios: “We need to be able as a nation to pivot to other contests that matter more than Afghanistan. … This is proof positive that Afghanistan is beyond saving.”
The intrigue: A Biden State Department spokesperson told Axios that Zalmay Khalilzad, the U.S. envoy, is in Doha, where the Taliban has its political office, to “press the Taliban to stop their military offensive and to negotiate a political settlement.”
- “If the Taliban continue down this path,” the spokesperson added, “they will be an international pariah.”
Asked about that, the Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told Axios: “We have never yielded to any foreign pressure tactics before and we do not plan to capitulate any time soon either.”
- Alayna Treene and Margaret Talev contributed reporting.
America’s biggest companies are hitting record profit margins despite rising costs for supplies and labor, Axios Markets editor Sam Ro writes.
- Why it matters: Raw materials inflation and wage hikes have had almost no noticeable effect on corporate earnings. But analysts warn it may just be a matter of time before those costs catch up with margins.
S&P 500 companies are reporting an average net profit margin of 13% in Q2, according to FactSet data through Friday.
- That’s the highest profit margin since FactSet began tracking the metric in 2008.
Between the lines: Small businesses have had a harder time absorbing and passing along increased costs.
- An NFIB small business survey found more companies are reporting lower earnings than higher earnings.
Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios
Cryptocurrency is beloved by people who want to transact outside the reach of government. But it’s gotten mainstream enough that politicians and regulators want control, Axios’ Felix Salmon reports.
- Why it matters: A more regulated system would help solve problems like the difficulty of buying a home using the proceeds of crypto sales. But regulation would defeat much of the original dream of cryptocurrency — a store of value untouched by government.
What’s happening: As crypto assets grew to be worth well over $1 trillion, investors and financiers increasingly wanted to get involved.
- They’ve been aggressively pushing for regulatory clarity, and often see their expensive compliance departments as a comparative advantage, differentiating them from the early true believers.
What’s next: SEC chair Gary Gensler — who taught a course on cryptocurrencies at MIT — gave an important speech last week laying out a maximalist vision for how his agency can regulate crypto.
The bottom line: Cryptocurrency’s future may be as an integral part of the existing financial system, regulated just as much as any other financial product.
Above, Vice President Harris presides as the Senate votes 69-30 — with 19 Republican “aye”s — to pass President Biden’s $1.2 trillion infrastructure plan.
- Quote of the day … President Biden said after the vote: “After years and years and years of ‘Infrastructure Week,’ we’re on the cusp of an infrastructure decade.”
Now the infrastructure bill goes to the House. Majority Leader Steny Hoyer announced members will return from recess Aug. 23. Read Hoyer’s letter.
- Go deeper: Breakdown of infrastructure spending.
Desperate to head off impeachment, advisers to Gov. Andrew Cuomo considered person-on-the-street TV ads featuring New Yorkers who thought he was doing a great job, the N.Y. Times reports (subscription).
- The ads never ran and Cuomo resigned yesterday, effective in 14 days.
Cuomo confidants told The Times that until the end, he seemed to “evince a certain daredevil’s thrill in sizing up the long political odds — and fancying himself the rare breed capable of surmounting them.”
- “When the only friend you have is the one looking you back in the mirror,” a recent adviser said, “you’re screwed.”
For the first time in the history of the U.S. census, the number of white people is expected to show a decline — a benchmark that’s coming eight years earlier than projected, the WashPost reports.
- Why it matters: The opioid epidemic, and lower-than-anticipated birthrates among millennials after the Great Recession, accelerated the white population decline, Brookings’ William Frey told The Post.
Above, Lionel Messi, 34, undergoes medical tests in Paris before signing his $41 million-a-year contract with Paris Saint-Germain last night.
Meanwhile, in Barcelona … Workers ripped down Messi’s photo from outside the team’s Camp Nou stadium.
📬 Please invite your friends, family, colleagues to sign up here for Axios AM and Axios PM.
14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
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16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Grieving police officers direct their anger at CPD’s second-in-command
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: A warning sign for Democrats on climate policy
DRIVING THE DAY
We have liftoff. Early this morning, in a 50-49 vote along party lines, the Senate passed a $3.5 trillion budget resolution that outlines the Dems’ policy agenda.
We stayed up late watching the Senate vote-a-rama, the long and free-wheeling debate over amendments to the budget resolution.
The vote-a-rama is meaningless in some ways. The amendments — as well as the underlying resolution — are all non-binding. The exercise has become mostly about crafting language to put the other party in a bind. But the process can be revealing.
There’s a tit-for-tat quality to the proceeding that tests each side’s political debating skills.
Sen. CHUCK GRASSLEY (R-Iowa) put forward an amendment to prevent any changes to the SALT deduction “that mainly benefit the wealthy.” Not bad! He hit a soft spot for Dems, some of whom represent high-income states and demanded that SALT relief be included in the budget (against the wishes of the White House). It allowed Grassley to call Democrats hypocrites for proposing “tax cuts for the wealthy” and wanting to make the tax code less progressive.
Wait a second, the Democrats responded, the GOP is talking about a progressive tax code? Sen. RON WYDEN (D-Ore.) immediately put forward an amendment “relating to increasing the progressivity of the tax code.” Every Republican voted against it.
But so did two Democrats: MAGGIE HASSAN (N.H.), who is up for reelection next year, and JEANNE SHAHEEN (N.H.). Another vulnerability exposed.
So what did we learn from the vote-a-rama?
The big culture war issues that might be very effective in next year’s election are easy to maneuver around in the Senate. Democrats and Republicans voted unanimously in favor of an anti-defund the police amendment from Sen. TOMMY TUBERVILLE (R-Ala.). Ditto for an amendment from Sen. AMY KLOBUCHAR (D-Minn.) to honor the police and first responders who protected the Capitol on Jan. 6. Similarly, Democrats did not take the bait on an amendment concerning U.S. funding for “terrorist organizations such as Hamas or the Palestinian Islamic Jihad,” or even one to prohibit enactment of the Green New Deal; both passed unanimously.
But if there was one area where the Republican Party repeatedly revealed a Democratic divide, it was on climate policy.
Some examples:
— Republicans peeled off eight senators — MICHAEL BENNET (D-Colo.), BOB CASEY (D-Pa.), MARTIN HEINRICH (D-N.M.), JOHN HICKENLOOPER (D-Colo.), ANGUS KING (I-Maine), BEN RAY LUJÁN (D-N.M.), JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) and JON TESTER (D-Mont.) — in a vote over banning fracking, a big priority for progressives.
— Republicans won over four Democrats — MARK KELLY (Ariz.), KYRSTEN SINEMA (Ariz.), Manchin and Tester — in a vote on preventing federal funding for fossil fuel-burning power plants.
— Republicans wooed three Democrats — Kelly, Manchin and Sinema — in a politically adroit vote to means-test President JOE BIDEN’s electric vehicle tax credits. Electric cars are more expensive on average than ones with gasoline engines, and the Biden plan would allow Americans of any income buying any kind of electric vehicle to take advantage of the credits. But why, Sen. DEB FISCHER (R-Neb.) asked, should the government “subsidize luxury vehicles” for the wealthy? The three Democrats thought that was a good question.
— Then there was the livestock flatulence vote. Sen. JONI ERNST (R-Iowa), standing next to a sign that said “No Cow Tax,” proposed an amendment to stop “permit requirements on farmers and ranchers” or “the imposition of new Federal methane requirements on livestock.” Her amendment attracted 17 Democratic votes. Some of those were clearly from progressives who viewed the language as harmless — there are no pending animal flatulence regulations in the pipeline — but moderates like Kelly, Sinema and Tester also backed it.
— Finally, a major dividing line in progressive circles is between climate activists who want to ramp up renewables as fast as possible (which often means relying on low-cost products from China) and the “Buy America” wing aligned with labor and human rights advocates who want to build up these industries in America and ban federal purchases from China. Sen. DAN SULLIVAN (R-Alaska) drove a truck through that divide with an amendment to prohibit “renewable energy projects receiving federal funds and subsidies from purchasing materials, technology, and critical minerals produced in China.” Eight Senate progressives, including the chamber’s top climate hawks — RICHARD BLUMENTHAL (D-Conn.), CORY BOOKER (D-N.J.), TOM CARPER (D-Del.), KIRSTEN GILLIBRAND (D-N.Y.), ED MARKEY (D-Mass.), CHRIS MURPHY (D-Conn.), BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.) and SHELDON WHITEHOUSE (D-R.I.) — refused to join 90 of their Senate colleagues in supporting the amendment.
Climate activists, buoyed by a frightening U.N. report released Monday, are already feeling marginalized after the Biden infrastructure bill ditched their priorities. If they were watching the vote-a-rama Tuesday night, they have cause for concern about being given short shrift in the reconciliation bill as well.
BONUS MANCHIN-BUCKING-HIS-PARTY VOTE: The West Virginian was the only Dem to join every Republican in supporting an amendment from Sen. TOM COTTON (R-Ark.) prohibiting the teaching of critical race theory in K-12 schools.
Read our intrepid budget reporters Caitlin Emma and Jennifer Scholtes for the main recap of the whole process.
THE NEXT BIG QUESTION MARK — “GOP prays Sinema and Manchin pare back Dems’ big spending bill,” by Burgess Everett: “The two moderates may try to slash down their party’s ambitions. But as one Republican put it: ‘What’s down? $100 million? $1 trillion?’”
Good Wednesday morning, and thanks for reading Playbook. Between infrastructure and the ANDREW CUOMO resignation, Tuesday was a crazy news day. Yet the top-read story on WaPo’s website Tuesday night? “The enduring power of Rickrolling: Rick Astley’s ‘Never Gonna Give You Up’ surpasses a billion views on YouTube.” We pass no judgment on Post readers here … we couldn’t resist clicking, either. It was actually quite worth it, especially for the two Playbook team members who were children of the ’80s.
Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
BIDEN’S WEDNESDAY:
— 10 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 11:15 a.m.: Biden will meet virtually with business, university and health care leaders to discuss vaccinations.
— 1:15 p.m.: Biden will deliver remarks on his Build Back Better agenda in the East Room.
— 3 p.m.: Biden will meet with governors, mayors and other state, local and tribal officials to discuss the infrastructure bill.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:15 p.m.
THE HOUSE and THE SENATE are out.
PLAYBOOK READS
CUOMO GOES DOWN
Former U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York PREET BHARARA: “I was a little taken aback that he said his resignation is effective in 14 days — and it may be overly cynical on my part — but I believe that ANDREW CUOMO was a person of mischief.”
Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT): “It isn’t just a Cuomo detractor speculating about this. Some folks close to Cuomo have too.”
“‘The king is dead’: Albany toasts Cuomo’s collapse — and worries about his ghosts,” by Bill Mahoney in Albany: “Denizens of the New York State Capitol celebrated on Tuesday afternoon, with longtime foes of the soon to be former governor drinking champagne and pondering a future without Cuomo at the top. There was widespread praise for incoming Gov. KATHY HOCHUL …
“Still, transitioning out of the Cuomo era will not be an easy task. Cuomo, after nearly three fiery terms at the helm, has tentacles that stretch into every corner of state government. Cleaning house would be a difficult task for any incoming governor — let alone one who can only promise potential replacements some 15 months of employment. And it’s all but guaranteed that the various investigations into Cuomo will drag on for months or even years.”
THE TICK-TOCK — “Railing at Enemies and Pleading for Time: Inside Cuomo’s Final Days,” by NYT’s Matt Flegenheimer, Maggie Haberman, William Rashbaum and Danny Hakim: “Behind the scenes, the governor vacillated between defiant and defeated, eventually accepting that his formidable political army had fallen away.”
— “How Cuomo’s flexing of political power became his undoing,” by WaPo’s Josh Dawsey and Michael Scherer
— “Cuomo accusers react to governor’s resignation,” ABC
— The N.Y. tabs have a field day: “AT THE END OF HIS GROPE,” N.Y. Post … “KISS HIM G’BYE,” N.Y. Daily News
INFRASTRUCTURE YEAR
INTERESTING PRAISE — “McConnell Credits Biden for Infrastructure Breakthrough, Dismisses Trump Criticism,” by WSJ’s Lindsay Wise: “Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL credited President Biden with helping to get the roughly $1 trillion infrastructure bill passed in the Senate, but said he doesn’t anticipate many more opportunities for Republicans to work with Democrats. …
“‘There’s nothing to back you up like the promise of a presidential signatory, if you’re in the same party as the president,’ [McConnell] said. ‘And so I think the president deserves a lot of credit for getting the Democrats open to reaching a bipartisan agreement on this bill.’” … ‘When the president ran for office, he said he was a moderate, so I was looking for some evidence of it,’ Mr. McConnell said. ‘And we finally, finally found it.’”
THE LIMITS OF GOODWILL — “Biden scores a bipartisan win. Even his team isn’t ‘Pollyannaish’ about more,” by Chris Cadelago and Laura Barrón-López: “The passage of the [infrastructure] bill caps a remarkable stretch of negotiations between the administration and the Senate, one that moderates from both parties believe could serve as a blueprint for future agreements. …
“But ‘momentum,’ as described by [LOUISA] TERRELL, is often short-lived in Congress. And even as the White House celebrated passage of the infrastructure bill, it remains unclear what other agenda items Republicans will be willing to collaborate on. Even advocates for bipartisanship are skeptical about future deals. … Beyond infrastructure, it remains unclear what types of bipartisan cooperation can be achieved on other legislative items. Even those who spend their days promoting political moderation aren’t bullish about the prospects.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS — “Texas House speaker signs warrants to arrest 52 wayward Democrats,” Dallas Morning News: “The House voted 80-12 to issue the warrants, hours after the Texas Supreme Court blocked a lower court order preventing arrest warrants for fugitive legislators.”
WHAT HAS REPUBLICANS SALIVATING — “U.S. Rep. Ron Kind, Wisconsin’s longest-serving member of Congress, won’t seek reelection,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: “‘The truth is I’ve run out of gas,’ [RON KIND] told reporters. The move comes a year away from the 2022 primaries and as Republican DERRICK VAN ORDEN prepares a bid for the district that runs through Western and central Wisconsin. Van Orden narrowly lost to Kind in 2020. …
“Said Kind: ‘I’m part of a dying breed in public service today in Washington and certainly in Madison — someone who tried to be reasonable, pragmatic, thoughtful, worked hard to try to find common ground with my colleagues, work in a bipartisan way to find bipartisan solutions for the challenges that we face.’ … Kind’s departure will make it tougher for Democrats to maintain their 220-212 control of the House.”
BREAKING DOWN 2010 — “Census data spurred GOP’s largest partisan edge in decades,” by AP’s David Lieb: “Fresh off sweeping electoral victories a decade ago, Republican politicians used census data to draw voting districts that gave them a greater political advantage in more states than either party had in the past 50 years, according to a new Associated Press analysis.”
Dave Wasserman (@redistrict): “The first thing I’ll be watching when detailed Census data arrives on Thursday: whether minority counts are far lower than estimates suggested. 2020 *estimates* of the U.S. resident population: White: 59.8% Hispanic: 18.6% Black: 12.5% Asian/Other: 9.1%. Actual 2020 Census: ??”
THERE GOES DEMS’ FAVORITE TARGET — “Betsy DeVos says she’s not running for governor of Michigan,” by The Detroit News’ Ingrid Jacques
CASH DASH — “DeSantis rakes in cash as Florida’s Covid wars rage,” by Matt Dixon in Tallahassee: “Gov. RON DESANTIS has built a national political brand. Need proof? Just look at his political committee’s more than $4 million July haul. DeSantis … last month brought in political contributions from every state in the country and several United States territories as well as from members of the military serving overseas, according to campaign finance records.”
PANDEMIC
SURVEY SAYS — “Poll: Majorities support vaccine, mask mandates — but not Republicans,” by Marc Caputo: “The [POLITICO/Morning Consult] survey also found that about half of all voters blame the new wave of infections that have sent numbers spiking equally on the unvaccinated and on political leaders opposed to mask-wearing and social-distancing mandates. …
“[M]ore than 8 in 10 Democrats and at least half of independent voters want to require vaccinations for all Americans (except those with medical conditions), for employees who work in their area and for those who go to gyms or entertainment venues. But those requirements are supported by roughly 35 percent of Republicans … When it comes to mask mandates, Republican support inches up a few percentage points, but a majority is still opposed while nearly all Democrats and a majority [of] independents are in favor.”
WALENSKY SPEAKS — “America is missing vaccination goals, and Delta is raging, but it’s not because ‘anything particularly went wrong,’ CDC Director Rochelle Walensky says,” by Insider’s Nicholas Carlson: “‘[W]e have to understand sort of the big root of the issue and that the investment in public health, the investment in the infrastructure, was never capable of what was required of them in this moment.’”
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
POSTED OVERNIGHT — “U.S. officials warn collapse of Afghan capital could come sooner than expected,” by WaPo’s Dan Lamothe, John Hudson, Shane Harris and Anne Gearan: “The Biden administration is preparing for Afghanistan’s capital to fall far sooner than feared only weeks ago, as a rapid disintegration of security has prompted the revision of an already stark intelligence assessment predicting Kabul could be overrun within six to 12 months of the U.S. military departing, according to current and former U.S. officials familiar with the matter.”
GOOD LUCK — “Biden says Afghans must ‘fight for themselves’ as Taliban advances, does not regret U.S. withdrawal,” CNBC
LITTLE ROCKET WOMAN — “‘Treacherous’: Kim Jong-un’s sister condemns South Korea-U.S. war games,” Agence France-Presse: “KIM YO-JONG’s latest remarks come despite a surprise thaw on the Korean peninsula … By carrying out the drills, Seoul and Washington would ‘surely face greater security threats’, she said, and the North would strengthen its defence and pre-emptive strike capabilities.”
KNOWING QIN GANG — “Is China’s New U.S. Ambassador a ‘Wolf Warrior’—or a Fox?” by Melinda Liu in Beijing for Foreign Policy: “QIN [GANG] cannot risk deviating markedly from his senior colleagues’ tone. The 55-year-old diplomat, a fluent English speaker, is expected to be more pugnacious than his predecessor, CUI TIANKAI, a veteran specialist in U.S. affairs. At the same time, those of us in the press corps who have known Qin for years have seen a deft, wily player who is not necessarily anti-American (before joining the diplomatic corps in 1992, he was a news assistant at United Press International, a major U.S. wire service) but who knows how to bend with the prevailing wind from Beijing.
“Most importantly, Qin is seen to be a confidante of XI [JINPING]’s. Thus, Qin may well play a critical role in finding a way forward for a U.S.-China relationship that often seems irremediably broken but is necessary to solving some of the biggest problems of the day, including Covid-19 and climate change.”
MEDIAWATCH
TUCKER, UH, GETS RESULTS? — “Tucker Carlson’s Spying Allegations Being Investigated by National Security Agency Watchdog,” WSJ: “The review will examine NSA’s compliance with laws and policies governing intelligence collection, analysis and dissemination, including procedures surrounding the unmasking of the redacted identities of U.S. citizens or residents caught up in surveillance of foreign nationals, NSA Inspector General ROBERT STORCH said. …
“The allegation of improper NSA surveillance prompted a rare statement from the NSA rejecting the claims. ‘This allegation is untrue,’ an NSA spokesman said at the time.”
BOOK CLUB — “‘A Publisher’s Worst Nightmare’: How Cuomo’s Book Became a Cautionary Tale,” by NYT’s Alexandra Alter and Elizabeth Harris: “At the time, it seemed like a guaranteed best seller. … Crown, an imprint of Penguin Random House, beat out competitors with an offer of more than $5 million. It was a gamble on an author whose previous memoir sold fewer than 4,000 hardcover copies. And it backfired spectacularly. …
“‘American Crisis: Leadership Lessons From the Covid-19 Pandemic’ became a source of financial and ethical headaches for Crown. Sales were surprisingly weak for a title that Crown had invested in heavily, with fewer than 50,000 hardcover copies sold … Following Mr. Cuomo’s resignation announcement on Tuesday, questions remained about whether Crown will pay the remainder of his advance.”
PLAYBOOKERS
IN MEMORIAM — “Neal Conan, Longtime Host Of NPR’s ‘Talk Of The Nation,’ Dies At 71,” by NPR’s Robert Siegel
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Fiasco — a documentary series “about politics, power and uncertainty” based on the podcast of the same name — will debut on EPIX on Sept. 19 at 10 p.m. The first season of Leon Neyfakh’s six-episode series will cover the Iran-Contra affair. Watch the trailer
NEW NOMINATIONS — The White House announced a new slate of U.S. attorney nominations: Jessica Aber for the Eastern District of Virginia, Carla Freedman for the Northern District of New York, William Ihlenfeld for the Northern District of West Virginia, Christopher Kavanaugh for the Western District of Virginia, Darcie McElwee for the District of Maine, Breon Peace for the Eastern District of New York, William Thompson for the Southern District of West Virginia and Damian Williams for the prominent Southern District of New York.
STAFFING UP — “Biden to tap Prelogar for solicitor general,” by AP’s Aamer Madhani: “Biden has decided to nominate acting Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar to serve in the job in a permanent basis.”
— The White House also put out a batch of other administration nominations, including María Luisa Pagán as deputy USTR in Geneva, Christopher Wilson as chief innovation and intellectual property negotiator at the Office of the USTR, Leopoldo Martinez as executive director and M. Fabiana Jorge as alternate executive director of the Inter-American Development Bank, Sasha Baker as deputy undersecretary of Defense for policy, Sean Coffey as general counsel of the Department of the Navy, Sarah Cleveland as legal adviser of the State Department, Joshua Frost as assistant Treasury secretary for financial markets, and Amy Loyd as assistant Education secretary for career, technical and adult education.
TRANSITIONS — C.J. Warnke is joining the Hub Project as senior manager for state comms. He previously was press secretary for Sen. Gary Peters’ (D-Mich.) reelection and is an Amy Klobuchar presidential campaign alum. … Marysol Ibarra is now comms director for Rep. Lou Correa (D-Calif.). She previously was a press fellow for Sen. Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.). … Mackenzie Martinez is now press secretary for Rep. Steve Chabot (R-Ohio). She most recently was press assistant for Rep. Mike Garcia (R-Calif.).
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Abdullah Alaoudh, Gulf director at Democracy for the Arab World Now, and Taghreed Alsabeh, a Ph.D. candidate in political science at Loyola University Chicago and former lecturer at King Saud University, welcomed son Aban on Sunday.
— Frederick Deknatel, executive editor for DAWN’s Democracy in Exile publication, and Emily McGoldrick, director of creative services at Dizon Inc., welcomed daughter Shea last week.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Reps. Dan Kildee (D-Mich.) and Billy Long (R-Mo.) … David Brooks (6-0) … Matt Morgan of Barnes & Thornburg … Charles Blow … POLITICO’s Toby Eckert, Michael Roberts and Joel Lau … Rob O’Donnell … Chris Berry of iHeartMedia … Vice’s Liz Landers … Joanna Piacenza of Morning Consult … Rising Tide Interactive’s Brian Krebs … Alex Siciliano of the Petrizzo Group … NYT’s Lyndsey Layton … CNN’s Rachel Smolkin … Lauren Maddox of Holland & Knight … Jesse Barba of Young Invincibles … Chris Lisi … Dan Wolf … Kedrin Simms Brachman … Charlene Barshefsky … DemList’s Kimberly Scott … Albert Morales … Marissa Hopkins … DOE’s Colin Cunliff … former Sen. Tim Hutchinson (R-Ark.) … Pamitha Weerasinghe … John Kohler … Thad Huguley … John Files … David Rubenstein … Pamela Lynne Sorensen … Mollyann Brodie … Greg Michaelidis … Mitra Kalita of URL Media … Sam Myers Jr. … Maggie Tennis … Eric Reicin … Ilana Drimmer
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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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Biden’s Border Woes Continue
The surge of migrants at the border is the largest in decades, defying all seasonal trends.
The Dispatch Staff | 4 |
Happy Wednesday! Our softball league’s playoffs begin tonight, and rumor has it a certain center-right media company’s CEO is slated to make an appearance …
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The Senate voted 69-30 on Tuesday to pass the bipartisan infrastructure package, with 19 Republicans and all 50 Democrats supporting the bill. It authorizes $550 billion in new spending and would—according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office—add $256 billion to the deficit over the next decade. The package now goes to the House, which is expected to take it up at some point in late August or early September.
- New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Tuesday that he will resign his post in 14 days, heading off a likely impeachment following Attorney General Letitia James’ recent report detailing the governor’s history of sexual harassment. Cuomo maintained yesterday the report was “politically motivated” and that the “most serious allegations” against him “had no credible factual basis,” but said he would resign so as not to distract from the government’s functioning. Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, will be sworn in upon Cuomo’s resignation.
- President Biden on Tuesday announced eight U.S. attorney nominations, including Damian Williams to serve as U.S. attorney for the powerful Southern District of New York. Williams has worked in the SDNY office—which is overseeing several investigations into former President Trump’s business and associates—for almost a decade, focusing on securities fraud.
- Democratic Rep. Ron Kind of Wisconsin announced yesterday that he will not seek reelection in 2022, telling reporters he’s “run out of gas” after nearly 25 years in office. Kind defeated his Republican opponent in 2020 by about 3 percentage points, but Donald Trump won the district by almost 5 points.
- A Chinese court sentenced Canadian businessman Michael Spavor to 11 years in prison after declaring him guilty of spying and sharing state secrets with a foreign recipient. The case is widely viewed as retaliation for Canada’s arrest of a Chinese Huawei executive in 2018.
- The Texas House of Representatives voted 80-12 Tuesday night to authorize law enforcement officers to round up Democratic lawmakers who fled the chamber last month “under warrant of arrest, if necessary.”
Biden’s Border Plan Isn’t Working
By now, there’s no denying that the U.S. is in the midst of a historic surge of illegal immigration. More than 188,000 migrants were intercepted trying to cross the border in June, the highest monthly number in more than 20 years. Preliminary estimates show July to have topped even that, with 210,000 migrant apprehensions.
These numbers are even more striking when you factor in seasonal trends. Illegal border crossings typically plummet during the summer, when the heat makes the long, arduous journey up through Central America and Mexico even more unbearable. More people are attempting to get into the country illegally than have been in a long, long time.
Such a surge makes one thing clear: Eight months into Joe Biden’s presidency, at least one plank of his immigration policy has failed.
Until now, Biden has gambled that he can walk a tightrope on immigration—gradually easing the border control policies implemented by his predecessor and loathed by his base, but keeping crossings down via a messaging strategy communicating to potential migrants that the border remains closed and they should not attempt the journey.
When it came to border crossings, Trump left two major policies in place: The Migrant Protection Protocols, under which migrants suing for asylum in America were required to remain in Mexico pending their court date, and Title 42, a pandemic-era policy that required the deportation of all border-crossers from Mexico and several Central American countries, purportedly for the sake of public health. Biden ended the former entirely and the latter in part, implementing an exception for unaccompanied children.
All the while, the administration insisted that these policy moves did not amount to reopening the border. “The border is closed,” Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas told NBC back in March. “We are expelling families. We are expelling single adults. And we’ve made a decision that we will not expel young, vulnerable children. … We just won’t do that. That’s not who we are.”
With migrants seemingly not getting the memo, team Biden has made additional gestures toward enforcement in recent weeks. After suggesting it was on the brink of ending Title 42 altogether last month, the administration reversed itself last week, renewing the order indefinitely. They’ve also moved to resume “expedited removal” of some families with children crossing the border illegally who do not fall under Title 42, permitting them to be immediately re-expelled without a hearing unless they claim they face likely immediate harm back home. Finally, the administration has taken several measures to discourage previously deported people from attempting the crossing again, including flying migrants expelled under Title 42 deeper into Mexico and stepping up referrals for prosecution for single adults who try the crossing multiple times.
Worth Your Time
- Disgraced New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s list of ethical transgressions doesn’t begin and end with a coverup of nursing home COVID deaths and sexual harassment allegations. Hours before his resignation Tuesday, Ronan Farrow of The New Yorker broke the story of Cuomo’s apparent effort to deter a federal prosecutor from investigating his closure of an anti-corruption commission by appealing to the Obama White House in 2014. “The commission began with a sweeping mandate from Cuomo to probe systemic corruption in political campaigns and state government,” Farrow writes. “However, interviews with a dozen former officials with ties to the commission, along with hundreds of pages of internal documents, text messages, and personal notes obtained by The New Yorker, reveal that Cuomo and his team used increasingly heavy-handed tactics to limit inquiries that might implicate him or his allies.”
- It was an incredibly long and bumpy road to Senate passage for the bipartisan infrastructure package. Politico congressional reporters Burgess Everett and Marianne Levine take readers behind the scenes, detailing how the chemistry and trust between a group of 10 senators got the deal across the finish line. “[Sen. Kyrsten] Sinema and [Sen. Rob] Portman are the gang’s de facto leaders on infrastructure; they couldn’t be more different. The buttoned-up Portman avoids controversy, while the enigmatic Sinema is loathed by liberals and revels in ignoring their ire. [Sen. Lisa] Murkowski called it an “unlikely partnership,” but it worked,” Everett and Levine write. “‘There was a pragmatism that came from Portman about, you know, just methodically punching through,’ Murkowski recalled. When negotiators tried to reopen items that had already been agreed to, the Alaskan said, Sinema would tell them: ‘You, stop that. We’ve already resolved that.’”
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
OR Governor signed law suspending the state’s proficiency standards for reading, writing and math in the name of “equity.” oregonlive.com/politics/2021/…
Toeing the Company Line
- Tuesday’s edition of The Sweep features a potpourri of Sarah’s thoughts: on Cuomo’s resignation, vaccine mandates for campaign staffers, Tim Scott’s fundraising prowess, Texas Democrats, and more. Plus, Chris Stirewalt explains why political reporters tend to struggle gauging the viability of candidates.
- This week’s Uphill focuses on—you guessed it—infrastructure! Sen. Bill Cassidy—an architect of the deal—shares his frustration with some of its detractors, accusing them of “totally making things up out of whole cloth.” Stick around for a status report on Democrats’ gargantuan budget resolution, and another update on the debt ceiling.
- “Why are we losing Afghanistan? The shortest accurate answer is that we’ve chosen to lose Afghanistan.” David’s latest French Press (🔒) looks at the final days of America’s longest war, and why the United States proved unable to win it. “While it’s wrong to say that we didn’t accomplish anything in the nation-building mission,” he writes, “it’s absolutely correct that we didn’t accomplish enough, and there was no reasonable timetable to accomplish enough to leave the nation with any degree of confidence that its government could stand alone.”
- Jonah is joined on The Remnant by Case Western University professor Jonathan Adler. The two explore the constitutional implications of the eviction moratorium, whether The Suicide Squad is worth watching, and how mitigating the threat of climate change through nuclear power won’t produce an abundance of three-eyed fish.
- On the site today, Bill Wirtz details the protests sweeping Europe over vaccine passport mandates and explains how the vaccination debate is different there than here in the United States.
- Also, Jonah writes that Biden’s decision to unilaterally implement an eviction moratorium is a violation of his oath of office, but points out it is unlikely to come with too heavy a political price: George W. Bush, Obama, and Trump all did the same, and no one seemed to care. We should be outraged, he writes, both at feckless politicians “and at ourselves: “It’s a rare day that fidelity to the Constitution is demanded by the people or the press, except when it’s a useful talking point about a partisan disagreement.”
Let Us Know
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Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
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August 11, 2021 THE LATEST A minor miracle took place in Washington on Tuesday as a bipartisan infrastructure bill passed in the Senate by a 69 – 30 vote. That tees up Senate Democrats to immediately work to pass the rest of President Joe Biden’s economic agenda without any GOP support, a task that will involve keeping every member of the caucus on the same page. Meanwhile, Speaker Nancy Pelosi has a heck of a job ahead of her to get over the finish line in a House where progressives and moderates aren’t quite seeing eye to eye, Hayes Brown writes.
“I don’t envy the job ahead for Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.,” Brown writes of the puzzle ahead. “Because there are potential spoilers in both the House and the Senate.”
Read Hayes Brown’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Wednesday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES She’s obviously not hip to America’s long history of requiring vaccinations. Read More Last week was a powerful reminder of how wrongheaded that entire narrative always was. Read More Two months ago, Biden’s infrastructure talks with Republicans collapsed. How did we get here? Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE ON MSNBC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
While all eyes were on Albany and the fallout from Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s resignation, the Senate finally saw some bipartisan comity with the passage of President Joe Biden’s massive infrastructure bill.
Here’s the latest on both of those big stories and everything else we’re watching this Wednesday morning. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s resignation Tuesday after sexual-harassment allegations and a swiftly-moving impeachment effort marked the end of an era in New York politics.
With his exit, Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul, a fellow Democrat, will step in to serve the rest of his term when the resignation becomes effective in 14 days. She will become the state’s first female governor.
Though Cuomo, 63, apologized to his accusers, he made it clear he did not believe he stepped over a red line requiring removal from office. Instead, he framed his decision as one necessary to avoid protracted argument and divisiveness that would bring the state’s government to a halt.
“In my mind, I’ve never crossed the line with anyone, but I didn’t realize the extent to which the line has been redrawn,” he said. “There are generational and cultural shifts that I just didn’t fully appreciate.”
The women who accused him of sexual harassment spoke out after his resignation and they aren’t buying that excuse.
And while the three-term governor’s political career may appear to be over, his legal woes may have just begun.
Cuomo could face civil suits and criminal charges stemming from the sexual harassment allegations. He is also still facing fallout from the nursing home scandal, which involves allegations that the state health department underreported the Covid-19 death toll in nursing homes by as much as 50 percent.
New analysis: Cuomo’s dinosaur defense rings hollow, writes NBC News’ senior national politics reporter Jonathan Allen. It wasn’t Cuomo or the times that changed so much as what the public knew about his conduct. The Senate passed the Democrats’ $3.5 trillion budget early Wednesday morning, marking a crucial first step by Democrats toward enacting the heart of President Joe Biden’s ambitious domestic agenda to expand the social safety net.
It was the latest victory for Biden after the Senate passed a sweeping $550 billion infrastructure bill Tuesday hat would make a huge investment in the nation’s roads, public transit, water and broadband.
In a rare moment of bipartisanship, the bill passed 69 to 30, with 19 Republicans joining all Democrats.
The passage marks a victory for Biden, who made rebuilding the nation’s infrastructure the centerpiece of his campaign and who told the American people he could help usher in a new era of bipartisan cooperation.
The bill still faces some hurdles in the House, where it is expected to meet some Democratic skepticism, before it can land on Biden’s desk. Wednesday’s Top Stories
“It was fear, it was helplessness, it was anger,” said a 21-year-old Afghan woman who was forced to flee her hometown this week. “The emotions are gone,” said one longtime resident of the tiny Northern California town ravaged by wildfires. “I’m just trying to stay focused and do what I’m here to do: helping rebuild.” Professional paintball players said Jessica Maiolo’s message, which some perceived as anti-vaccination and fatphobic, doesn’t represent the larger paintball community. OPINION One party cannot breach a contract and then claim it’s OK because the injured party is rich. Especially if the breaching party is really, really rich, like Disney is, MSNBC legal analyst Danny Cevallos writes in an opinion piece. Also in the News
Canadian sentenced to 11 years in China in spying case tied to Huawei
Shopping
Korean beauty products have become increasingly popular in the U.S. over the last decade — here’s what experts recommend. One Fun Thing
Sometimes a fence doesn’t need to divide people, but can bring them together.
Two-year-old Benjamin Olson and nearly 100-year-old Mary O’Neill formed a special cross-generational friendship through their shared fence during the pandemic.
Watch the heart-warming video about them here.
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Wednesday, Aug. 11, and we’re covering the end to Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s reign in New York, the passage of the Senate infrastructure deal, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWCuomo ResignsNew York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) announced he would resign yesterday, one week after an internal probe concluded he sexually harassed a number of women in recent years. The announcement comes ahead of expected impeachment hearings led by the state’s Democratic-controlled legislature. Lawmakers had given Cuomo until Friday to provide evidence in his defense. Cuomo’s resignation will take effect in two weeks. The three-term governor has faced allegations from at least 11 women, both inside and outside his administration (previous write-up). The report detailed incidents ranging from inappropriate comments to groping and unwanted sexual contact. The independent probe lasted five months, spoke to nearly 180 witnesses, and concluded Cuomo’s actions broke state and federal law. Read the full report here. In his place, Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) is set to become the state’s first female governor. Cuomo’s resignation also leaves the 2022 race to lead the state wide open. Infrastructure Deal Passes The $1T bipartisan infrastructure deal passed the Senate yesterday by a final vote of 69-30. All 50 Democrats and 19 Republicans voted in favor of the package, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY); see the vote breakdown here. The deal would provide roughly $550B in new spending for physical infrastructure (see our previous write-up), with the remainder drawing on previous authority or reallocated funds. The bulk of new spending will be directed toward roads and bridges ($110B), the power grid ($73B), water projects ($55B), and similar items. See how the bill—projected to add $256B to the deficit over 10 years—differs from the White House’s initial proposal here. The package now heads to the House for consideration. In swift succession, the Senate passed a $3.5T budget resolution containing many White House priorities via a party-line reconciliation vote early this morning. Committees will spend the following months crafting the requisite spending bills. Bienvenue MessiSoccer superstar Lionel Messi arrived in Paris yesterday after agreeing to a deal with Paris Saint-Germain, ending his 21-year career in Barcelona. PSG and the 34-year-old, six-time Ballon d’Or winner—awarded to soccer’s best player each year—have reached a reported two-year contract worth $41M net annually, with a potential for a third year. The news comes after the Argentine star’s emotional farewell Sunday where he confirmed that the club’s immense debt made it impossible to re-sign with the club at the end of his contract. Messi maintained he offered to take a 50% pay cut—reducing his salary from $1.4M per week to $700K per week—but the club was unable to keep him (some reports suggest his total Barcelona pay was much higher). Under Spanish league regulations, a team can only spend 25% of the money it receives from player sales on new contracts and Messi was considered a free agent. Read about all the factors at play here. In partnership with GoodfishGUILT-FREE SNACKING IS HEREHave you ever wondered what it would be like to snack on a chip that’s an impossibly perfect balance of tasty, healthy, and sustainable? Give your imagination a break and experience Goodfish. Snacking with Goodfish is guilt-free in every sense of the word. Their deliciously crispy wild Alaskan salmon skins are good for you, the environment, and the fishermen too. Win-win-win! Goodfish’s crispy wild salmon skins are available in seven mouthwatering, tastebud-igniting flavors (we’re looking at you Sriracha Lemongrass, Chili Lime, and Salt & Vinegar), they have no carbs, and they’re packed with 10g of protein, marine collagen (read: glowing skin), and omega-3s. Throw in the fact that the chips are made with up-cycled salmon skins sourced sustainably from Bristol Bay, Alaska and *muah* you have the perfect, guilt-free snack. Take 20% off this tasty goodness today. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & CultureBrought to you by The Ascent > Christina Applegate, Emmy-winning star of “Dead to Me,” announces multiple sclerosis diagnosis (More) | Robin comes out as bisexual in latest Batman comic (More) > In-person attendance by nominees at 2021 Primetime Emmy Awards (Sept. 19, CBS) to be scaled back due to COVID-19 (More) > Chicago Blackhawks Hall of Fame goalie Tony Esposito dies at 78 of pancreatic cancer (More) | Pat Hitchcock, actress and daughter of director Alfred Hitchcock, dies at 93 (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. Science & Technology> Engineers demonstrate a chameleon robot capable of changing colors instantly to blend in with its surroundings (More) > Scientists create glass-like structure harder than diamond; both materials are made of carbon atoms arranged in different formations (More) > AI system helps drones learn how to tightly navigate around obstacles at high speeds without crashing; the advance enables more nimble drone usage in areas like search and rescue operations (More) Business & Markets> Sports merchandise e-commerce giant Fanatics raises $325M at an $18B valuation from investors including Jay-Z (More) > Dominion Voting Systems sues media outlets OANN and Newsmax for $1.6B apiece for defamation over claims their machines fraudulently shifted votes during 2020 election (More) > Japanese tech giant SoftBank sees quarterly net profits drop 40%, is holding back on Chinese investments following Beijing uncertainty on foreign investment (More) Politics & World Affairs> China sentences Canadian businessman Michael Spavor to 11 years in prison for alleged espionage; move is viewed as retaliation for the Canadian detention of Chinese business executive Meng Wanzhou (More) > National Security Agency inspector general to investigate claims by Fox News personality Tucker Carlson that the agency spied on him earlier this year (More) > Taliban fighters take their seventh and eighth provincial capitals in the past five days (More) | US vows to isolate the country from world functions if the group ultimately seizes control (More) A SNACK THAT CAN DO IT ALLIn partnership with Goodfish Goodfish’s deliciously crispy wild salmon skins are a healthy, yet tasty snack. Enjoy them alone as a yummy chip or as a crunchy, flavorful addition to your favorite dish. With 10g of protein, 0 carbs, and only 80 calories, crispy wild Alaskan salmon skins are great to crunch up into a salad or poke bowl, dip into a creamy dip, or simply snack on alone. You can’t go wrong with Goodfish, or the 20% off we got for you today only. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAVisualizing 4,000 years of global power. TikTok overtakes Facebook as the world’s most downloaded app. Mapping where America’s cities are growing. (paywall, WashPo) Stunning footage captures moths taking off in slow motion. Technical fault leaves the London Bridge stuck open. Australia’s (extinct) dragons. Ocean-swimming cat thinks he’s a dog. (w/video) What’s up with anti-showering celebrities? Clickbait: When bears go shopping. Historybook: Author and historian Alex Haley born (1921); HBD Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak (1950); HBD actress Viola Davis (1965); Final US ground combat troops leave South Vietnam during Vietnam War (1972); RIP Robin Williams (2014). “There’s no shame in failing. The only shame is not giving things your best shot.” – Robin Williams 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! |
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Wednesday 08.11.21 Tropical Storm Fred has formed off the coast of Puerto Rico, and much of the Caribbean — plus South Florida by week’s end — are in its path. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Senate Democrats meet to approve the budget resolution early this morning. US Senate
The Senate floor has been very, very busy. The Senate yesterday afternoon voted to advance the massive $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure package following months of intense negotiations. The final vote of 69-30 represented a wide bipartisan berth, but the bill will likely encounter new challenges as it goes to the House. Then, early this morning, Senate Democrats approved their $3.5 trillion budget resolution, which they hope will pave the way for a huge economic package without the threat of legislative obstacles from Republicans who oppose it. The measure passed after a lengthy series of amendment votes known as a “vote-a-rama.” Next, it also goes to the House for approval. Only after both chambers pass it will Democrats be able to use a process known as budget reconciliation to pass the legislation on a party-line vote. It addresses health care, aid for families, the climate crisis and more.
Andrew Cuomo
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced he will resign amid the growing fallout from a sexual harassment scandal. His resignation heads off potential impeachment plans from the state’s Democratic-led legislature, which rumbled to life after the New York attorney general released a report last week that concluded Cuomo had sexually harassed 11 women. Cuomo said his resignation will take effect in two weeks, bringing an end to his decadelong tenure as governor. Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Buffalo native, is poised to take up the mantle and would become the state’s first female governor. Cuomo has denied all allegations against him, saying he never touched anyone inappropriately. He continued yesterday to skirt the line between apology and excuses, insisting he was, politically, the victim of evolving social norms.
Coronavirus
The start of the school season could mark a seriously dangerous time in the pandemic for children as Delta variant cases rise and many adults continue to avoid health precautions and Covid-19 vaccines. The good news is the national vaccination rate is finally up again to the same level we saw in June — about 500,000 new vaccinations initiated per day. However, since there is a lag in immunity for newly vaccinated people, and since children under 12 still can’t get vaccinated, the dangers will linger for a while. Meantime, three major US airlines — Southwest, American and Delta — won’t require their employees to receive a Covid-19 shot. This is a departure from United Airlines’ mandate that all employees get vaccinated by October 25 or face getting fired.
Dominion Voting
Dominion Voting Systems is suing right-wing TV channels Newsmax and One America News, alleging they aided the spread of baseless conspiracy theories about the technology company’s role in the 2020 election. Dominion was targeted by former President Trump in the aftermath of November’s election. His media allies assisted in spreading conspiracy theories about rigged voting machines and other baseless claims, often with Dominion’s name attached. The company is asking for $1.6 billion in each of its suits against OAN and Newsmax. Dominion has also sued MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, former Trump campaign lawyers Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell, and Patrick Byrne, the former chief executive of Overstock, alleging they all had a hand in spreading election misinformation. A similar $1.6 billion lawsuit from Dominion against Fox News is also pending.
China
Canadian businessman Michael Spavor has been sentenced by a Chinese court to 11 years in prison for spying. Spavor is one of two Canadian businessmen detained in China in 2018 following the arrest in Vancouver of Meng Wanzhou, CFO of Chinese tech giant Huawei, over allegations the company violated US sanctions on Iran. The detention of Spavor and his countryman Michael Kovrig has led to a plummeting relationship between China and Canada and ongoing concerns about the men’s welfare. Canada’s ambassador to China said the Canadian government strongly condemned the Spavor verdict. The Trump and Biden administrations have both said they will help the Canadian government in fighting for the men’s release.
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Alcoholic Mountain Dew exists now 67% That’s the proportion of ultra-processed foods that make up the average diet of US children and teenagers, according to a new analysis of two decades of data. It’s up from 61% in 1999. The goal is 2024, but space is hard.
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson, addressing challenges NASA faces in getting astronauts back to the moon by a self-imposed 2024 goal date. NASA Inspector General Paul K. Martin says significant delays in developing spacesuits make that timeline unfeasible. Brought to you by CNN Underscored One of our favorite smokeless fire pits just went on sale Here at CNN Underscored, we’re big fans of Solo Stove and right now you can save some big bucks on all of its low-smoke, ultra-efficient wood-burning fire pits and camp stoves perfect for weekends in the wilderness. ‘Merry-Go-Round of Life’ 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
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Daily Digest |
- Patriot games
- War on standards, parking ticket edition
- Breaking: Cuomo Resigns
- “Trump Made Me Do It!”
- How Crazy Are Liberals?
Patriot games
Posted: 10 Aug 2021 11:59 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Torri Huske is an 18 year-old swimmer from Arlington, Virginia. At this year’s Summer Olympic Games, she finished fourth in the 100-meter butterfly final, just one one-hundredth of a second behind Emma McKeon of Australia. Huske came back to win a silver medal in the 4×100-meter medley relay, along with Regan Smith, Lydia Jacoby, and Abbey Weitzeil. Huske graduated from high school this year and will soon be headed to Stanford. She’s likely to be a major force at the next Olympics in three years. Huske is a patriot with even more reason than most to love America. According to this story in the Washington Post, her mother Ying is a native of China whose family was “relocated” during the Cultural Revolution. Eventually, she made it to the U.S. and, following college, worked for the U.S. Navy in IT. When her daughter Torri made the Olympic Team, Ying said, “I feel like I’m living out my American Dream.” A Power Line reader from Arlington who has known Huske since she was little calls her “a level-headed young woman who has a bright future ahead of her” and “a compelling story of devotion to the United States and what it represents.” When Huske returned home from Tokyo, her high school friends threw a surprise welcome home party for her. Here’s an account of it in the local press. On Instagram, Huske said:
This sentiment is pretty typical of what I heard other U.S. athletes say at this year’s Olympics. Our Power Line reader was at the welcome home party. He reports:
I guess there is reason for hope, after all.
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War on standards, parking ticket edition
Posted: 10 Aug 2021 10:32 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Considering how much I hate receiving parking tickets, this is one war on standards I might get behind. However, it also extends to compliance with driving, vehicle registration, and fine-paying requirements. The Washington Post assigned a team to investigate ticketing in Washington, D.C. The team collected five years of traffic and parking enforcement data containing more than 10 million records of infractions. It then merged that information with data from the Census Bureau to analyze enforcement records by area of the city. The Post found that 62 percent of all fines were issued in neighborhoods where Blacks make up at least 70 percent of the population. And outside of downtown and commercial areas, fines in predominantly Black neighborhoods amounted, on average, to $7.6 million annually, compared to $4.1 in White neighborhoods. The Black and White populations of D.C. are roughly equal in size if one counts Hispanics as Whites. According to the Post, more than half of the motor vehicles registered in D.C. are in majority-White zip codes. Do the Post’s statistics demonstrate racial bias in enforcement or do they show that Blacks comply less with parking and traffic laws? They demonstrate neither. However, logic suggests that the latter explanation is more plausible. Take parking tickets, about which I have some first-hand experience. D.C. meter monitors, most of whom are Black as far as I can tell, have no incentive to give more tickets to Blacks than to Whites. Neither do their bosses or their bosses’ bosses, who are also Black in most cases. The only incentive these men and women have is to give out as many tickets as possible, so as to maximize city revenue. As one of the Post’s sources, a leading critic of parking and traffic enforcement, says, “their job is only to bring in revenue.” Thus, in all likelihood, they mostly patrol areas where violations tend to occur. The predominately White area from Dupont Circle through Georgetown is, in my experience, heavily patrolled for parking violations. Pre-pandemic, I always understood that leaving my car there for much more than the permitted time was a risky proposition. The same is true, I assume, in Black neighborhoods in which experience has shown there are likely to be lots of parking violations. It’s not a question of bias or discrimination, it’s all about finding violations. The Post complains that, because D.C. Blacks are poorer than D.C. Whites, it’s more difficult for them to pay their fines. It points out that unpaid fines are doubled and that failure to pay can also result in non-renewal of license and vehicle registrations. It cites with apparently approval claims that the system is “crippling the finances of poor and working-class Black and Brown families” and “criminalizing poverty.” You can’t have an effective traffic enforcement system that doesn’t punish non-compliance. But Black and Brown families can avoid punishment by (1) obeying the law or (2) paying their tickets on time. If one can afford to own, gas-up, and maintain a car, one can afford to pay a parking ticket. It’s only when offenders violate the rules repeatedly or refuse to pay the initial ticket that hardship may arise. The Post also investigated traffic stops that resulted in tickets. It found that in the past two years Blacks received more than $5.8 million worth of such tickets, compared to $1.1 million for Whites. More than one-fourth of all such fines were to Blacks between the ages of 26 and 35. Again, there is no reason to believe that these numbers reflect racial bias or discrimination. The D.C. police says it makes traffic stops in response to public safety demands. Given the disproportionate extent to which young Black males in D.C. violate other, more important laws, it makes sense that they would be stopped to a disproportionate degree and, accordingly, be ticketed disproportionately. Looking at the overall situation, D.C. has two basic options here. It can maintain the current, non-discriminatory system, perhaps with a few adjustments, or it can forgo large amounts of revenue to accommodate Blacks who don’t obey the law and don’t pay their fines. With the way things are going, it’s likely that the city will move in the latter direction and try to recoup much of the revenue by taxing prosperous residents. If so, I expect many of these residents to leave the city, as it becomes more expensive and less safe to remain there. Washington, D.C. could be heading downhill pretty fast.
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Breaking: Cuomo Resigns
Posted: 10 Aug 2021 09:23 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)Apparently the walls have closed in sufficiently that even a mega-narcissist like Andrew Cuomo couldn’t escape.
Next question: What will CNN do about his brother? Chaser: Tweet of the Day—
Honorable mention:
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“Trump Made Me Do It!”
Posted: 10 Aug 2021 08:41 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)It is not news that Rep. Rashida Tlaib, a charter member of “The Squad,” traffics in anti-Semitic tropes. The Washington Post points this out today:
Good for the Post. At least so far. Because you won’t believe what the Post blames for Rep. Tlaib’s anti-Semitism. Yup—it’s all Donald Trump’s fault. Seriously, here’s the Post headline:
Naturally this is a Dana Milbank column, so we should expect gems such as this:
Milbank no doubt calls this kind of ventriloquist journalism “reporting.” Of course, aside from concluding that perhaps, just maybe, Tlaib is in fact anti-Semitic, this account deliberately elides acknowledging who are the predominant perpetrators of violence against Jews, just as the left ignores who is the predominant offender against Asians today: it is coming from the left. The New York Times recently reported on rising violence against Asians in the San Francisco Bay Area without once mentioning the predominant race of the people committing assaults on Asians, leaving the impression that it is Trumpsters, even though the number of Trump supporters in the Bay Area can meet in a phone booth. Clearly we need to end the eviction moratorium soon, since Trump is living rent-free inside the heads of the media and the left (but I repeat. . .)
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How Crazy Are Liberals?
Posted: 10 Aug 2021 08:25 AM PDT (John Hinderaker)Over the last few years, a number of friends around the country have said to me, following one of Ilhan Omar’s outrages, surely she can’t be re-elected now. I have had to explain that the things Omar does that we view as radical or worse are, sadly, popular with most of her constituents. This illustrates what I am talking about: the chairman of the Minneapolis DFL Party expounding on the glorious burning of the Third Precinct police station:
These people are beyond reason. They aren’t going to change until the cities for which they are responsible hit rock bottom. And in their minds, at least, that hasn’t happened yet.
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