Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday August 12, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
August 12 2021
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Good morning from Washington, where a U.S. senator’s remarks on masks and COVID-19 get him banned from YouTube. Something ugly is growing, Jarrett Stepman writes. In a video report, a Border Patrol leader tells it like it is as Biden administration policies fuel a crisis. On the podcast, civil rights leader Bob Woodson celebrates black Americans who helped make the nation great. Plus: the salon owner who stood up to Nancy Pelosi isn’t going away; unfinished Cuomo business; and “Problematic Women” explores a documentary on kids and transgenderism. On this date in 1990, fossil hunter Susan Hendrickson discovers huge bones jutting from a cliff in South Dakota, part of the largest Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton yet discovered.
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 8.12.21
Good Thursday morning. Let’s start with two first-in-Sunburn personnel notes.
Metz Husband & Daughton has brought on Karl Rasmussen as a senior policy adviser, the firm announced Wednesday.
Rasmussen has been a part of The Process for over a decade, specializing in environment, insurance, gaming, health care, construction, technology and energy issues. He has lobbying experience in both the executive and legislative branches and has scored funding and rule-making wins for numerous clients.
Before entering the private sector, Rasmussen spent seven years working in state government, culminating in a three-year stint as deputy chief of staff in the administration of then-Gov. Rick Scott. The position saw him develop policy positions, legislative priorities and recommendations to the Governor, focusing on health care and environmental issues.
“We’re excited to have Karl join our team and are looking forward to working with him,” MHD President Jim Daughton said. “Karl’s experience working inside state government as well as in the private sector will no doubt lend itself well to our firm and our clients. He has a depth of knowledge about both policy issues and the political process, that combined with his strong work ethic, will be a true asset for MHD.”
Rasmussen added, “MHD has a great reputation, and I’m looking forward to being a part of the MHD team. So, when the opportunity presented itself to be a part of this incredibly hardworking and professional team, I knew it was the right step in my career to continue to grow and support such great clients with MHD.”
Rasmussen joins a team that includes named partners Stephen Metz, Warren Husband and Daughton as well as Douglas Bell, Patricia Greene, Aimee Diaz Lyon, Andy Palmer and Allison Liby-Schoonover.
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Dr. Lonna Rae Atkeson is now the director of The LeRoy Collins Institute.
Atkeson is a renowned expert on election science and administration, survey research, public policy, voting rights, state politics, public opinion and political behavior.
She comes to the Institute from the University of New Mexico, where she was a political-science professor and regents lecturer. She succeeds Dr. Carol S. Weissert, who retired at the end of July after serving as the Institute’s director for 14 years.
The LeRoy Collins Institute, located on Florida State University campus, studies and promotes policy solutions to issues facing Florida and the United States.
“We are extremely pleased to welcome Dr. Atkeson as our new director,” said Lester Abberger, the LeRoy Collins Institute chair. “As a scholar and expert on public policy and elections, Dr. Atkeson is uniquely positioned to lead the Institute into the future.”
Atkeson earned plaudits for her public policy work in New Mexico and served as a consultant to the U.S. Department of Defense, the U.S. Election Assistance Commission and various private companies.
Her research has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the JEHT Foundation, the Golisano Foundation, the Thornburg Foundation, the New Mexico Department of Transportation, the New Mexico Secretary of State, and Bernalillo County, New Mexico.
“Dr. Atkeson’s experience throughout her career and her knowledge of policy and research make her an ideal fit for the Institute,” Weissert said. “We are honored to have her join us and look forward to her tenure leading the organization through an interesting period in our nation’s political life.”
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@SteveLemongello: (Ron) DeSantis now doing his 5th event in 2 days, handing out (federal) bonus checks to first responders & teachers. Praise from local officials, etc. If not for media Qs (one Jax reporter said he just came back from an overwhelmed hospital), you’d think everything was normal in FL
Tweet, tweet:
—@Amy_Hollyfield: Day 2 of school and the first #COVID19 case is in for my kid’s high school #Florida
Tweet, tweet:
—@PatSajak: I want to welcome Mike Richards to @Jeopardy. He thinks I’m a really good host, so he is obviously a man of taste and good judgment. (A reminder to Mike that the Game Show Host Association meets on Wednesdays at the Oxnard iHop.)
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 6; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 12; Boise vs. UCF — 21; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 22; Notre Dame at FSU — 24; NFL regular season begins — 28; Bucs home opener — 28; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 33; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 33; Alabama at UF — 37; Dolphins home opener — 38; Jaguars home opener — 38; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 39; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 43; ‘Dune’ premieres — 50; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 50; MLB regular season ends — 52; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 57; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 75; World Series Game 1 — 76; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 76; Georgia at UF — 79; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 82; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 82; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 87; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 88; Miami at FSU — 93; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 99; FSU vs. UF — 107; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 111; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 120; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 127; NFL season ends — 150; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 152; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 152; NFL playoffs begin — 153; Super Bowl LVI — 185; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 225; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 269; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 294; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 330; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 342; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 421; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 456.
“Think Florida’s latest COVID-19 surge has been bad? This UF model says it hasn’t peaked yet” via Danielle Ivanov of The Gainesville Sun — Florida hasn’t yet hit the peak of the ongoing COVID-19 delta variant surge, according to projections from University of Florida epidemiologists. Data and estimates from the UF Emerging Pathogens Institute show the delta wave capping around mid to late August, with infection rates reaching 40% higher than its last confirmed rate. The model assumes no substantial changes are made to flatten the curve, such as mandating masks. The published model does not include school reopenings, but that when added, the projected peak increases about 7%.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida COVID-19 update: 24,753 new cases — state breaks record for third time this week” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Florida — which makes up about 6.5% of the U.S. population, accounted for 18.7% of the country’s new cases on Tuesday — based on data the state is reporting to the CDC. As of Aug. 10, the state’s seven-day moving average of new cases was 21,156, up from a moving average of 3,701 on July 10. That number represents roughly a 472% increase, stemming from the highly contagious delta variant. On Wednesday, the state also reported four new deaths the day before. In all, Florida has recorded at least 2,806,813 confirmed COVID-19 cases statewide and 40,182 deaths, according to the CDC. The CDC reports that every county’s level of community transmission is high.
“Florida requested ventilators from the federal government. But there’s no shortage.” via Kirby Wilson of the Tampa Bay Times — The federal Department of Health and Human Services has sent 200 ventilators, and 100 high-flow nasal oxygen kits to Florida as hospitals deal with an unprecedented flood of COVID-19 patients. The federal government said it shipped the equipment after receiving a request to do so from Florida. But as with many issues surrounding the pandemic these days, the request for the emergency materials was not without political drama. This week, the White House and the DeSantis administration had another brief back-and-forth about the coronavirus emergency. On Tuesday, at a news conference in Jacksonville, DeSantis said he was unaware of the request for more materials.
“Florida COVID-19 hospitalizations keep rising, ICU patients over 3,100, federal HHS says” via David J. Neal of the Miami Herald — Most hospitalization numbers related to COVID-19 patients in Florida continued rising, both in gross numbers and percentages. The state reset its record for current COVID-19 hospitalizations for the 11th consecutive day, this time at 15,449, an increase of 280 over Tuesday’s report. That accounts for 28% of all hospitalizations among the 232 hospitals reporting. As for patients per hospital reporting, that’s now at 66.6, a slight edge up from Tuesday’s 65.7. The intensive care units at those hospitals have 3,114 COVID-19 patients, the HHS said, 54 more than Tuesday. That’s 47.6% of all ICU patients in reporting Florida facilities. The ICU patients per hospital edged from 13.2 to 13.4.
“Nikki Fried mounts economic case against Ron DeSantis’ COVID-19 policies” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Fried mounted an economic case Wednesday against DeSantis’ handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. Speaking at the Capitol, Fried charged DeSantis with prioritizing political ambitions over the state’s economy and physical health. The fallout, she warned, is dire. Fried reported a nearly 40% increase in teacher shortages across the state since August. The total, per the survey, accounts for nearly 5,000 teaching vacancies and 3,700 staff positions. Fried and the FEA laid blame, in part, to a resurging pandemic and the ongoing controversy over masks.
Assignment editors — Fried will provide an update on COVID-19 and a review of updated mask guidance from the CDC, 2 p.m., the Cabinet Room. RSVP to Caroline.Stonecipher@fdacs.gov.
“Florida vaccinations climb during delta surge, but half the state is still unvaccinated” via Ian Hodgson of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida is setting records for COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations. The highly contagious delta variant spreads through the Sunshine State faster than ever seen before in the pandemic. But there’s one Florida COVID-19 metric finally moving in the right direction: More people are getting vaccinated after a sharp decline. According to the CDC, more than 340,000 Floridians got their first dose of protection against the coronavirus in the past week. It’s the highest weekly total since mid-May and marks the reversal of a four-month decline in vaccination rates around the state.
— CORONA LOCAL —
“Hospitals overcapacity as COVID-19 cases swamp Brevard admissions and emergency rooms” via Dave Berman, Rick Neale, Britt Kennerly, Amira Sweilem of Florida Today — As COVID-19 patient counts continue to soar in Brevard County, some in the medical and emergency management sectors paint an increasingly dire picture of the situation. All three hospital systems in the county are over capacity, and are continuing to deal with a strong surge in patients, Brevard County Emergency Management Director John Scott said. Brevard County Communications Director Don Walker said county officials are now working with the hospital systems to identify potential sites outside the hospitals to house patients, should the surge reach a level at which they run out of space and can no longer handle the patient counts.
“Broward Schools must reverse mask mandate or risk ‘sanctions,’ Ed. Commissioner says” via Michelle Marchante and Ana Ceballos of the Miami Herald — Broward school leaders have until Friday to tell Florida if they intend to comply with state rules on mask mandates that call for an opt-out option for parents who don’t want their kids to wear one. Broward’s mandate doesn’t have an opt-out option. If the district doesn’t change its mask-requirement policy, the state could invoke “sanctions,” including withholding the salaries of the superintendent and School Board members, Florida Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran warned in a letter. The letter was sent to Broward Schools Interim Superintendent Vickie Cartwright and School Board Chair Rosalind Osgood late Tuesday.
“State hits back at Broward Schools over masks” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Education Commissioner Corcoran has issued a letter threatening to withhold money from the Broward School Board if they don’t reverse their decision to require all students to wear masks. The letter says the district has until Friday to state how it plans to adhere to a Governor’s order and state Department of Health rule, requiring that masks be optional for students. School Board Chair Osgood said the board will respond but has no plans to comply. “I am willing to get into Good Trouble to save lives,” Osgood said in a text. “I am willing to make a personal financial sacrifice to do what is morally right.”
“Masks fully optional, Brevard County School Board votes on first day of school” via Bailey Gallion of Florida Today — The Brevard County School Board voted 3-2 not to institute a mask requirement, even if the policy included an opt-out for parents, at a packed, peaceful Tuesday night meeting that stretched long into the night. Concerned parents, health workers and residents called on the School Board to defy DeSantis’ executive order threatening to take funding from districts that forced students to wear masks. Pro-mask protesters sparred with anti-mask mandate protesters in vitriolic dueling demonstrations before the meeting. Ultimately, most board members believed a policy with an opt-out would have the same result as leaving masks optional but would place an unnecessary administrative burden on the district to collect the forms and enforce parents’ wishes.
“School mask debate on social media heating up in Pinellas County” via Chip Osowski of WFLA — Parents of school-age children in Pinellas County are still debating whether masks should be required in school. Many are posting on the Pinellas County School District’s Facebook page. Some believe that there should be a mandate in place due to the spike in COVID-19 cases we’ve seen recently. Others post praise on the School District’s Facebook page, thanking district officials for not making it a requirement. School Superintendent Dr. Michael Grego says safety is the district’s main concern.
—“Class is in session: Walton County schools leave COVID-19 precautions up to parents” via Jim Thompson of Northwest Florida Daily News
—“COVID-19 in Leon County: School system will resume dashboard; 194 hospitalized locally” via Casey Chapter of the Tallahassee Democrat
—“Escambia County parents hope for ‘normal year’ with fewer COVID-19 restrictions in schools” via Madison Arnold of the Pensacola News Journal
“Monroe County School District implements mask mandate for start of school year” via Amanda Batchelor of WPLG Local 10 News — As students get ready to return to class Thursday in Monroe County, the School District has informed parents and staff members that they are implementing a mask mandate for at least the next two weeks. Students and faculty must wear masks while on school grounds and while traveling on school buses. According to a notice posted on the district’s website, the district will follow the state’s requirement to allow parents the choice to opt-out of having their children wear face masks if they choose to. “The status of the virus will be reexamined on August 24 and every School Board meeting thereafter,” the notice stated.
“New first-day experience: Letter home warning of COVID-19 positive person at school” via Sonja Isger of the Palm Beach Post — Before the sun rose on the second day of school in Palm Beach County, letters alerting parents to positive COVID-19 cases on campus had begun to roll out of at least four front offices, including notices from Jupiter Farms Elementary, Watson B. Duncan and Christa McAuliffe middle schools and Olympic Heights High. And according to the District’s relaunched COVID-19 dashboard, at least three more letters from Day One will be coming. The alert from Jupiter Farms went out Tuesday after school officials were notified that someone attending the school’s meet-and-greet Friday has tested positive for the virus, according to the letter from Principal Suzanne Matuella.
“FIU ‘strongly advises’ but will not require masks on campus” via Veronica Crespo of WPLG Local 10 News — Florida International University released guidance about curbing the spread of the COVID-19 virus for the upcoming semester, in a message to students on Wednesday. When it comes to face coverings on campus, President Mark Rosenberg released the following statement: “Effective immediately and in accordance with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines, we strongly advise all students, faculty, staff, visitors and vendors to wear a face-covering at all times while indoors at any FIU facility, regardless of your vaccination status.” The communication went on to list availability and information for on-campus vaccine appointments. Meanwhile, The University of Florida is not recommending masks indoors on campus and has said quote “they are expected to be worn.”
“Parents, students hold rally in Miami in support of mask mandates at schools” via Hatzel Vela, Saira Anwer and Amanda Batchelor of WPLG Local 10 News — While a Miami-Dade County School District committee met in downtown Miami Wednesday, a rally was held outside in support of students and staff members wearing face coverings in class. “Just asking to keep them safe,” said parent Alberto Calvo. “I think it’s common sense.” In favor of a mask mandate, parents and students staged the peaceful demonstration outside of the School District’s administration building. “I want them to be protected and myself too,” one young boy said. Parents explained why they’re advocating for their children’s health. “His mask is protecting other children, and other children’s masks will protect him, and if we’re not all on the same page on this, some kids are going to get sick,” Rebecca Covey said.
“Florida officials alarmed by drop in childhood immunizations” via the Tribune News Service — The statewide vaccination rate for children between 24 and 35 months old who rely on county health departments was 79.3% in 2021, a drop from 93.4% the year before, an analysis of vaccination records conducted by the Florida Department of Health shows. Meanwhile, the statewide vaccination rate for 1-year-old children was 67%, down from 73% the previous year. Carina Blackmore, director of DOH’s Division of Disease Control and Health Protection, in a June 4 memorandum, attributed the declines to the impact of measures taken to curb the spread of COVID-19. The virus caused licensed day care centers to close and parents to seek telehealth services instead of in-person appointments.
“Pensacola won’t issue new permits for indoor events through Sept. 15 as COVID-19 surges” via the Pensacola News Journal — The new restrictions, which the city of Pensacola announced in a news release Wednesday afternoon, will remain in effect through Sept. 15, at which point they will be re-evaluated based on current COVID-19 conditions. Events that have already been issued a permit or events currently in the permitting process between now and Sept. 15 will be allowed at outdoor city venues. The new restrictions only apply to city-permitted events at city venues and do not apply to private events. The city will work with event organizers to reschedule events as needed, according to the release.
“City of Tampa now requires employees to show proof of vaccination to go mask-free” via Charlie Frago of the Tampa Bay Times — The city’s order requires city employees to prove their vaccination status to Human Resources before they get their buttons and wristbands. The city isn’t mandating vaccinations, but it requires employees who aren’t vaccinated to wear masks when inside a city vehicle with another person, moving through common space in office settings and when social distancing isn’t possible. So far, Mayor Jane Castor said, the reaction has been positive from city employees with high levels of compliance. And, she said, the city’s three main unions representing firefighters, police officers and mostly blue-collar city workers are on board. Although she didn’t have data available Wednesday afternoon, Castor said quarantines and infection rates of city workers are trending downward.
“Jacksonville hospitals’ COVID-19 cases fluctuate as surge continues statewide” via Beth Reese Cravey of The Florida Times-Union — For the first time in weeks, two of the Jacksonville-area hospital systems that are releasing daily COVID-19 patient counts reported lower numbers Wednesday than the day before. And the third system reported the same number of patients hospitalized with the virus as the day before. In Jacksonville, Baptist Health reported 582 COVID-19 patients at its five hospitals on Wednesday, the same number they reported Tuesday. Of that total, 118 were in intensive care. Ascension St. Vincent’s three local hospitals reported 418 patients with COVID-19, a decrease of 14 since Tuesday. UF Jacksonville reported 257 COVID-19 patients at its two local hospitals, including 61 in intensive care. That’s 11 fewer patients than the 257 reported Tuesday.
“Okaloosa sees ‘extraordinary’ number of COVID-19 cases filling up Okaloosa hospital beds, ICU” via Tom McLaughlin and Jim Thompson of Northwest Florida Daily News — The 181 COVID-19 patients hospitalized as of Tuesday in Okaloosa County are occupying 53.2% of all beds in the county’s three acute care facilities, according to Health Department Director Dr. Karen Chapman. “It’s the highest (number) we have ever seen,” Chapman said in an addendum to her weekly coronavirus report. Additionally, 30 patients with COVID-19 occupied the 60 ICU beds available countywide Tuesday, and 16 COVID-19 patients are presently relying on ventilators. “It is extraordinary to see so many beds overall and in the ICU occupied by patients with one disease cause,” Chapman wrote. Among the hospitalized, 94% are unvaccinated, 12% are people between the ages of 18-44, and 40% range in age from 45 to 64.
“Collier County Black Affairs Advisory Board short three members due to vacancies” via Jake Allen of the Naples Daily News — Collier County’s advisory board responsible for giving voice to the Black community is short three of its nine members because of vacancies. “It’s such an important board, and the people involved with it are very passionate,” said Maria Pizarro, community liaison to the county’s Black Affairs Advisory Board. “The more people who know of the board and what it does, the better.” The Black Affairs Advisory Board identifies and evaluates problems unique to the Black community. It was created in 1991 and reviews and recommends ways to ensure open communication between minorities and the Collier County government. The board provides periodic reports to the Board of County Commissioners with members serving four-year terms.
“Lost to COVID-19: Ex-Lake Worth Beach Mayor developed Scholars for Dollars chapter” via Jorge Milian of the Palm Beach Post — Whenever David Cantley found himself in a financial pinch during his 19 years as principal at Lake Worth High School, there was one alumnus always ready to answer his call. Dennis Dorsey, a class of 1953 graduate who served as Mayor and City Commissioner in Lake Worth Beach, made a small fortune in the funeral home business after graduating from his alma mater. “He was successful, and he gave back a lot — very, very generous with his money,” said Cantley, the school’s principal from 1980-99. ” I was always needing money for something, and Dennis always came through. He never turned me down on anything.” Dorsey, 87, died Aug. 2 after contracting COVID-19.
“Conservative radio host and vaccine critic dies of COVID-19 complications” via Adela Suliman and Paulina Villegas of The Washington Post — A conservative radio host in Florida who vehemently criticized the coronavirus vaccine has died of complications following COVID-19, his fiancee and life-partner Kittie Farley confirmed Monday. On Aug. 4, Farrel Austin Levitt, publicly known as Dick Farrel, died of “severe damage” caused by COVID-19, Farley said. He was 65. Farrel, a vocal supporter of former President Donald Trump, had said on his Facebook page the inoculations had been “promoted by people who lied [to you] all along about masks, where the virus came from, and the death toll.”
— STATEWIDE —
“Tropical Storm Fred could hug Florida coast this weekend” via Joe Mario Pedersen, Richard Tribou and Lisa Maria Garza of the Orlando Sentinel — The eye of Tropical Storm Fred is passing over the Dominican Republic Wednesday afternoon while forecasts still have it targeting Florida this weekend, the National Hurricane Center said in its 5 p.m. update. The season’s sixth named storm is 75 miles west-northwest of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, with maximum sustained winds dropping to 40 mph, down from 45 mph earlier today. The system is moving west-northwest at 15 mph with tropical-storm-force winds extending out 60 miles. Its forward speed is expected to slow in the next couple of days.
“Where is Tropical Storm Fred going, and will it come to Florida? What the forecast says” via Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — Forecasters are closely monitoring Tropical Storm Fred as it moves through the Caribbean Sea. Fred is forecast to move near or over the Dominican Republic and Haiti soon. According to the National Hurricane Center, Cuba and Florida are also on its forecast track, but there’s still some uncertainty on Fred’s path and how strong it will be. Tropical Storm Fred was quickly moving west-northwest in the Caribbean Sea with maximum sustained winds near 45 mph, according to the hurricane center’s advisory at 11 a.m. Wednesday. The storm was about 25 miles south-southeast of Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic.
“‘COVID-19 attacked us, teachers fought back’: DeSantis presents teacher bonuses in St. Pete” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — DeSantis appeared at Lakewood Elementary School to promote $1,000 bonus checks that will start hitting the bank accounts of all full-time teachers and principals statewide. Part of an initiative to improve teacher compensation, the bonus checks cost $216 million in federal COVID-19 relief dollars allocated in the 2021-22 state budget. It’s part of an initiative to improve teacher pay, which in 2020 included $500 million to increase salaries for new and veteran teachers, with an additional $50 million added in 2021. The bonuses are intended to show appreciation to educators for working throughout the pandemic.
Assignment editors — Sen. Randolph Bracy will unveil a new workforce development proposal for the 2022 Legislative Session. Orange County School Board Member Vicki-Elaine Felder will also attend, 10:30 a.m., Orange Technical College Mid-Florida Campus, 800 Building, 2900 W. Oak Road, Orlando.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
James Daughton, Warren Husband, Douglas Bell, Allison Liby-Schoonover, Andrew Palmer, Karl Rasmussen, Metz Husband & Daughton: Age of Learning, South West Florida Enterprises
Alan Suskey, Suskey Consulting: The Able Trust
Bill Rubin, Rubin Turnbull & Associates: Independent Living Systems
Zach Sherman: Lockheed Martin Corp.
— 2022 —
“Lincoln Project attacks DeSantis, Greg Abbott for ‘jeopardizing’ students” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — The Lincoln Project is attacking DeSantis for his prohibition on mask mandates in schools with its latest ad. In the ad, the prominent “Never Trump” organization led by Republican operatives set its sights on DeSantis and Texas Republican Gov. Abbott. The ads show masked children in school before cutting to a video of a child receiving chest physiotherapy, a medical technique to help clear the lungs. “This is where your child should be this fall,” the ad begins showing kids in school. DeSantis and Abbott have let Trump‘s “reckless base dictate their COVID-19 policies,” the Lincoln Project says. With several schools starting classes this week in Florida, they’re pointing to children.
To watch the ad, click on the image below:
“Republicans are seizing on backlash to new mask and vaccine mandates” via Melanie Zanona of CNN — As Republicans head back to their districts for the August recess, they are hammering the CDC and seizing on the backlash to new mask and vaccine mandates, part of a GOP-wide effort to use the fears and frustrations of Americans worried about another round of school closures and lockdowns as cudgels against their Democratic opponents Those were the dominant themes of a House GOP news conference right before the summer break, and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy continued to beat that drum, firing off a new letter to the Capitol physician and saying in a separate statement that President Joe Biden has “threatened a return to lockdowns and government-mandated restrictions for American citizens.”
“New census data expected to reveal a more diverse America” via Nicholas Riccardi and Mike Schneider of The Associated Press — New data from the Census Bureau due to be released Thursday will map the scope of that demographic transformation over the last decade. The numbers are expected to show that dozens of counties across 18 states, largely in the South and Southwest, are now less than 50% white, and no racial or ethnic group makes up a majority. The non-Hispanic white population is expected to shrink for the first census on record. The estimates suggest that about 113 million people now live in a plurality county. The census figures will make plain the impact of expanding diversity: Virtually all population growth in the U.S. is among people of color, groups long viewed as racial or ethnic minorities. But when there is no majority, that label is increasing out of date.
“High stakes redistricting process to start. Will Florida redeem bruised reputation?” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — The once-a-decade process of redrawing political boundaries to adjust for population growth officially begins Thursday as the U.S. Census Bureau releases detailed results from the 2020 Census, providing the shotgun start to what has traditionally been one of the most politically charged battles in Florida’s capital city. The numbers in the redistricting data file will become the foundation for the Florida Legislature, and local cities and counties, to redraw their political districts. It’s an important task because it can influence who gets elected, how well various communities often left out of the political process are represented, and how federal funds are allocated.
“Gun reform activist Maxwell Frost announces run for Congress to succeed Val Demings” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — Former ACLU staffer and March For Our Lives activist Frost of Orlando is the latest candidate to announce a bid to succeed Demings in her western Orange County congressional district next year. “When I’m elected to Congress, I’ll be among the first members of my generation, Generation Z,” said Frost, 24, who would meet the constitutional age requirement of 25 by the time the term would start in 2023. “I am an Afro-Cuban, born and raised in the district and someone who has been doing work on the ground for a while.”
“Nick DiCeglie raises $42K in July, $25K from The Villages” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Rep. DiCeglie raised more than $40,000 in July for his bid to succeed Sen. Jeff Brandes, including a $25,000 drop from the well-known retirement community, The Villages. DiCeglie raised $42,570 between his campaign and the affiliated political committee, Economic Freedom Committee. DiCeglie’s raised $3,570 last month for his official campaign, and his committee brought in $39,000 in the same period. With the added money from his committee, DiCeglie outraised Democratic opponent Eunic Ortiz, whose campaign collected $6,388 in July. DiCeglie’s campaign reported 10 donors in July, including two donations worth $1,000 from property management company First Service Residential Florida and the ABC of Florida PAC.
“Annette Taddeo adds $35K to reelection bid in grassroots push” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Sen. Taddeo’s reelection campaign gained more than $34,500 last month through a blend of individual gifts and organization donations. Taddeo now has nearly $149,000 in cash ahead of an election more than a year away and in a District 40 race in which she currently has no challenger, and her haul last month marked the third-largest monthly uptick since she launched her reelection campaign in May 2019. Taddeo’s lean into grassroots fundraising is consistent with her past critiques and actions against political dark money.
“Shane Abbott reels in another $40K in race to succeed Brad Drake” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Abbott built on his fundraising lead in the Republican Primary to succeed Rep. Drake in House District 5, new finance reports show. Abbott pulled in more than $40,000. His total includes $25,270 in hard money and another $16,500 raised through his affiliated political committee, Prescription for Florida’s Prosperity. “I am beyond thankful for the tremendous support and good faith shown to myself, my family, and our conservative, America First campaign,” Abbott said. The campaign report lists 60 contributions, including 18 checks for $1,000. About half the maxed-out checks were written by individual pharmacists and pharmacy managers.
“Panama City Mayor backs Griff Griffitts for HD 6” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Bay County Commissioner Griffitts landed an endorsement from Panama City Mayor Greg Brudnicki in the race for House District 6. “I am proud to endorse Griff Griffitts for State Representative because he is dedicated to his community, as we have seen in his success and determination as a County Commissioner,” Brudnicki said. “I know he will fight tirelessly for conservative values and for Bay County. We need to send Griff to the Florida House. He will make a difference for the hardworking families in our community.” The Brudnicki announcement comes a month after Griffitts said he would be rolling out a series of nods from “key community leaders” as he seeks the seat currently held by Rep. Jay Trumbull, a fellow Republican who is leaving office due to term limits.
“Ileana Garcia banks $32K in July, mostly from builders” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Garcia banked $32,000 last month to defend her District 37 seat in 2022. The haul brings her campaign war chest to over $183,000 more than a year from an election in which she has no opponents so far. Garcia’s campaign has nearly $70,000 to spend, up $10,500 from June. Her political committee, No More Socialism, has more than $113,000, thanks to $21,500 in July donations. More than two-thirds of her donations came from South Florida’s booming home construction industry and two of the state’s most prominent lobbyists.
“Berny Jacques again leads HD 66 money race against Alen Tomczak” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Jacques again leads the money race in his bid for Florida House District 66 against fellow Tomczak. Jacques, a former prosecutor and an ally of Rep. Anthony Sabatini, raised nearly $15,000 in July. That includes $10,000 raised for his affiliated political committee, Florida Values Coalition, and $4,573 in hard money for his official campaign. As of the end of July, Jacques had about $77,000 on hand between his two accounts for his bid to succeed incumbent Rep. Nick DiCeglie, who is leaving office to run for the state Senate. Meanwhile, Tomczak, a technical lead at Special Operations Command at MacDill Air Force Base, took in just $3,450 for his official campaign, raising his total to $72,480 since entering the race in March.
—”Tomczak nabs veteran advocate nod from Jerry Lavely” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics
—”Jordan Leonard expands HD 100 money lead, adds nearly $21K in July” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics
“Vivian Casals-Muñoz $10K July haul for HD 111 bid led by charter school donors” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Casals-Muñoz added $10,000 in July toward her bid for House District 111. A sizable chunk came from parties backing Florida’s school voucher program, which reroutes public money to private and charter schools. Casals-Muñoz received $1,000 from School Development HC Finance, which is managed by Ignacio Zuleta, a founder of the for-profit charter school management company Academia. Donations of $1,000 also came from him and Fernando Zuleta, whom Academia’s website refers to as the company’s founder and president.
— CORONA NATION —
“FDA expected to authorize COVID-19 vaccine booster shots for some immunocompromised people within the next 48 hours” via Kaitlan Collins Jon Bonifield of CNN — The FDA is expected to announce within the next 48 hours that it is authorizing COVID-19 vaccine booster shots for some people who are immunocompromised. This would be a third shot of the current two-dose Pfizer and Moderna vaccines. That announcement could slide, the source cautioned, but this is the current timing. “The FDA is closely monitoring data as it becomes available from studies administering an additional dose of the authorized COVID-19 vaccines to immunocompromised individuals,” an FDA spokesperson said. “The agency, along with the CDC, is evaluating potential options on this issue, and will share information in the near future.”
“CDC urges COVID-19 vaccines during pregnancy as delta surges” via The Associated Press — The CDC urged all pregnant women Wednesday to get the COVID-19 vaccine as hospitals in hot spots around the U.S. see disturbing numbers of unvaccinated mothers-to-be seriously ill with the virus. Expectant women run a higher risk of severe illness and pregnancy complications from the coronavirus, including perhaps miscarriages and stillbirths. But their vaccination rates are low, with only about 23% having received at least one dose. “The vaccines are safe and effective, and it has never been more urgent to increase vaccinations as we face the highly transmissible delta variant and see severe outcomes from COVID-19 among unvaccinated pregnant people,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said in a statement.
“Children’s hospitals are swamped with COVID-19 patients and it may only get worse” via Dan Goldberg and Alice Miranda Ollstein of POLITICO — The number of kids infected with COVID-19 is soaring as the highly contagious Delta variant spreads and schools reopen, pushing children’s hospitals around the country to the brink. Nearly 1,600 kids with COVID-19 were hospitalized last week, a new seven-day record and a 27% increase from the week before. Tennessee’s health commissioner expects the state’s children’s hospitals to be full by the week’s end. Louisiana reached that point more than a week ago. And Arkansas’ only children’s hospital has just two ICU beds remaining.
—“Texas now has the fewest ICU beds available it’s had during the entire COVID-19 pandemic” via Luz Moreno-Lozano of the Austin American-Statesman
“Poll: Majorities support vaccine, mask mandates — but not Republicans” via Marc Caputo of POLITICO — A majority of voters support mandatory coronavirus vaccines and indoor mask-wearing requirements, according to a new Morning Consult/POLITICO poll that shows opposition to the requirements is chiefly limited to Republicans. The 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 political leaders opposed to mask-wearing and social-distancing mandates. About one-fifth of voters said neither is responsible; 14% blamed the unvaccinated solely, and 7% targeted the politicians.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“GOP, industry signal fight over potential Joe Biden vaccine ‘threat’” via Rachel Roubein of POLITICO — Republicans and some industry groups are signaling they would oppose any effort from the Biden administration to use the threat of withholding federal funds to push some employers, like nursing homes and health facilities, to mandate COVID-19 vaccines. If Biden goes that route, the move would mark the first time his administration has used the power of the purse to increase vaccinations. Administration officials have struggled for months to find new ways to jump-start immunizations, and some public health experts believe this could help.
“Inflation stayed high in July as economy rebounded” via Gwynn Guilford of The Wall Street Journal — Inflation remained elevated in July as the economic recovery continued, but prices showed evidence of cooling amid pandemic-related supply problems and signs that the recent rise in coronavirus infections is starting to crimp some business activity. Consumer prices rose 5.4% in July from a year earlier, the same pace as in June, the highest 12-month rate since 2008. On a monthly basis, however, price pressures weakened. The department’s consumer-price index climbed a seasonally adjusted 0.5% in July from June.
“How the pandemic upended Florida’s seafood industry” via Hannah Farrow of POLITICO — America’s appetite for seafood soared during the pandemic — and Florida’s fishing industry cashed in. Just how much have prices increased? Parker Destin, the owner of the Dewey Destin’s restaurants in Florida, said he’s now paying $26 a pound for lump crabmeat — up from $11 per pound before COVID-19 swept through the country. From Washington to Maine to Florida, the price for crabs, shrimp, lobster and other delicacies has skyrocketed due to enormous demand, changes in eating and shopping habits, and disruptions to the supply chain. In Florida, restaurant owners have never served so many customers.
— MORE CORONA —
“U.S. mask makers say they’re in danger of going broke” via Karl Evers-Hillstrom of The Hill — American face mask manufacturers are warning they will soon go broke without government support, potentially ceding domestic mask production amid a surge in COVID-19 cases. Private companies and state and local governments favor Chinese masks, costing just a fraction of American-made face coverings. The lack of demand has forced mask manufacturers to lay off more than 5,000 employees, and executives say the industry won’t make it to next year unless it is thrown a lifeline.
“Republicans risk becoming face of delta surge as key GOP Governors oppose anti-COVID-19 measures” via Felicia Sonmez and Hannah Knowles of The Washington Post — In Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott has banned local governments from implementing mask requirements. In South Dakota, Gov. Kristi Noem welcomed hundreds of thousands of revelers to the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally that last year bore characteristics of a superspreader event for the virus. And DeSantis is waging war on school districts seeking to defy his executive order prohibiting mask mandates for students. They and other national and local GOP officials cast their opposition to such measures have caused fear the party is on track to make itself the face of the delta variant.
—“Gavin Newsom orders school employees to get vaccinated or be tested regularly” via Howard Blume and John Myers of The Los Angeles Times
“Will COVID-19 vaccine booster shots be needed? It’s likely, experts say, but the immunocompromised should be prioritized.” via Elizabeth Weise and Karen Weintraub of USA Today — The U.S. government is considering ways to protect roughly 10 million immunocompromised Americans who may have gotten inadequate protection from their COVID-19 vaccines. The FDA is evaluating the possible use of booster doses. Immunocompromised people, who make up about 3% of the U.S. population, are in a different category than other Americans because they may not have mounted an adequate immune response to their COVID-19 vaccinations.
“U.S. sends nearly 1 million COVID-19 vaccine doses to Caribbean nations” via Jacqueline Charles of the Miami Herald — The Biden administration began shipping more than 830,000 doses of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine to six Caribbean nations as part of its commitment to help the fight against the pandemic. The vaccine donations come on the heels of the U.S. Southern Command’s assistance to the Caribbean as part of a COVID-19 response effort that has included desperately needed field hospitals for several Caribbean countries seeing peaks in virus cases, ventilators, personal protection equipment, and oxygen generators. Doral-based Southcom has more than 90 COVID-19-related projects in the Caribbean region alone, totaling more than $18 million, with more assistance to come, said Southern Command’s commanding officer, Adm. Craig Faller.
“Why so many white evangelicals are shifting from vaccine hesitance to acceptance” via Mya Jaradat of Deseret News — White evangelicals, one of the groups with the highest proportion of vaccine-hesitant and refusers, are changing their minds. In March, less than half (45%) of white evangelicals said they would get the vaccine, according to a study, with more than half saying they were either hesitant or that they would refuse to get the vaccine. But by June, those numbers had flipped, with a majority (56%) of white evangelicals falling, instead, into the “vaccine acceptance” category. Hispanic Protestants, another group below 50% acceptance in March, have also changed, going from a 43% acceptance rate to 56% in June.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden defies expectations. Again.” via Jennifer Rubin of The Washington Post — The Senate passed a $1.2 trillion infrastructure deal with 19 Republican votes. Had someone polled the White House press corps a month ago, few would have expected any bipartisan deal possible. Journalists at mainstream media outlets are creatures of habit laced with cynicism. They rarely anticipate how swiftly events can change or how dramatically the future can depart from the past. In their deep cynicism about politicians, they routinely scorn those who do not conform to their low expectations. Those tendencies help explain why the mainstream media have consistently underestimated Biden and falsely predicted the failure of his agenda.
“The President deserves a lot of credit”: Mitch McConnell praises Biden on infrastructure bill” via Erin Doherty of Axios — McConnell credited Biden on Tuesday for his role in getting the Senate to pass the $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill. It’s a rare flash of praise from the Senate Minority Leader, who has previously said that 100% of his focus is on “stopping” the Biden administration’s agenda. McConnell applauded Biden’s role in getting Democrats to support the bill and push it across the finish line. “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 told The Wall Street Journal. “And so I think the President deserves a lot of credit for getting the Democrats open to reaching a bipartisan agreement on this bill.”
“Biden struggles to find a permanent FDA chief as agency nears approval of COVID-19 vaccine” via Kaitlan Collins and Jen Christensen of CNN — The FDA is on the cusp of approving the nation’s first COVID-19 vaccine without a permanent leader at the helm, and a nomination doesn’t appear to be in sight. For months, the agency at the forefront of the coronavirus response has served under the leadership of an acting commissioner, Dr. Janet Woodcock, as Biden struggled to find a candidate who can win Senate confirmation. For months, Biden’s top aides have considered several possibilities for the top job, but have ultimately come up short.
“White House presses Senate to move more quickly to confirm political ambassadors: ‘What is the holdup?’” via Felicia Sonmez of The Washington Post — White House press secretary Jen Psaki criticized the Senate for not moving more quickly to confirm Biden’s ambassadorial nominees, as only one of Biden’s political ambassadors has been confirmed more than six months after the inauguration. “We are frustrated over the slow pace of confirmations, particularly for noncontroversial nominees,” Psaki told reporters at her Wednesday afternoon news briefing. Hours earlier, the Senate confirmed Ken Salazar, the former interior secretary and senator from Colorado, as U.S. ambassador to Mexico. Salazar is the first of Biden’s political ambassadors to be confirmed by the Senate.
“Biden team is seeking ways to address rising energy prices” via Zeke Miller of The Associated Press — Biden’s administration is moving at home and abroad to try to address concerns about rising energy prices slowing the nation’s recovery from the pandemic-induced recession. National security adviser Jake Sullivan on Wednesday called on the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to move faster to restore the global supply of petroleum, and the White House asked the FTC to investigate the domestic gasoline market for any anti-competitive behavior. The joint actions come as the administration is increasingly sensitive to rising prices across the economy as it faces both political and policy pressure from inflation. “The production cuts made during the pandemic should be reversed as the global economy recovers in order to lower prices for consumers,” Biden said Wednesday.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Accountants must give the House some of Donald Trump’s financial data, a judge rules.” via Charlie Savage of The New York Times — Trump’s accounting firm must give Congress his tax and other financial records from his time in the White House, and for a longer period about his lease of a government-owned building for a hotel, a judge ruled. But in his 53-page opinion, the judge, Amit P. Mehta of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, also ruled that the House Committee on Oversight and Reform was not entitled to other financial records covering years before Trump took office. The panel had issued a broad request for records dating back to 2011.
“A Trump lawyer admits you can’t believe him — again” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — We knew, on the basis of the Justice Department inspector general’s report, that Rudy Giuliani had effectively walked back his late-2016 suggestions that he might have known something about the FBI’s reopening its investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails. Giuliani’s comments surrounding then-FBI Director James Comey’s announcement were problematic because they indicated that he, a political ally of a presidential candidate, might have received nonpublic law enforcement information about an opponent late in a campaign. Giuliani and Marc Mukasey effectively contended that Giuliani couldn’t possibly be expected to have been telling the truth.
“Rudy Giuliani told agents it was OK to ‘throw a fake’ during political campaign” via Devlin Barrett of The Washington Post — Giuliani’s promise of a “big surprise” to help Trump’s election in October 2016 led to Democratic accusations the FBI was feeding him secrets about an investigation of Hillary Clinton. But a newly obtained transcript shows the former New York mayor told federal agents it was OK to “throw a fake” when campaigning, to which his then-law partner added, “there’s no obligation to tell the truth.” Giuliani’s comments came in a 2018 interview with agents for the Justice Department inspector general, conducted in a room at Trump’s hotel in downtown Washington.
“‘We are in harm’s way’: Election officials fear for their personal safety amid torrent of false claims about voting” via Tom Hamburger, Rosalind S. Helderman and Amy Gardner of The Washington Post — Local officials across the country are coping with an ongoing barrage of criticism and personal attacks that many fear could lead to an exodus of veteran election administrators before the next presidential race. “The complaints, the threats, the abuse, the magnitude of the pressure — it’s too much,’’ said Susan Nash, a city clerk in Livonia, Michigan. As Trump continues to promote the false notion that the 2020 White House race was tainted by fraud, there is mounting evidence that his attacks are curdling the faith that many Americans once had in their elections and taking a deep toll on the public servants who work to protect the vote.
— CRISIS —
“Capitol riot defendant from Polk County asks judge to remove ankle monitor” via Justin Schecker of WFLA — A Polk County man arrested for his participation in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol is asking a federal judge to remove his GPS ankle monitor, but federal prosecutors are objecting that request to change his conditions of release. Joshua Doolin was terminated from his job as a Polk County Fire EMT after his arrest on June 30. According to a court filing from Doolin’s attorney, the 23-year-old exercises about five times a week, and he reports that the ankle monitor is a “hindrance” and has caused “annoying blisters.” Doolin is charged with the misdemeanors of unlawful entry and disorderly & disruptive conduct in a restricted building.
—“Two Virginia friends plead guilty in Jan. 6 case” via Lexi Lonas of The Hill
—“2 Seattle officers who were at Capitol on Jan. 6 are fired” via Sarah Dewberry of KXLF
“Jan. 6 panel’s hiring of Homeland Security official draws scrutiny” via Rachael Levy of The Wall Street Journal — Joseph Maher, a senior department attorney who was recently appointed to the select committee staff, last year oversaw the department’s Office of Intelligence of Analysis. That office is tasked with monitoring social media for threats and failed to warn law-enforcement agencies of a possible assault after the office scaled back its monitoring of online chatter in the lead-up to Jan. 6. The Jan. 6 panel intends to investigate that office and others over information-sharing ahead of the assault on the Capitol by a mob of Trump supporters. Maher’s addition to the committee staff has upset some DHS officials, who have privately called for his removal. Outside government, some are publicly calling for Maher to be removed from the committee.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Florida could get billions for infrastructure. Here’s where it could go.” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Florida could get $16 billion-plus in projects, including investments throughout South Florida, from infrastructure legislation that moved significantly closer to becoming law Tuesday with U.S. Senate passage. Just where the money will go isn’t yet known, though some likely priorities can be deduced through a combination of educated guesswork, the overall size and shape of the measure that won Senate approval on Tuesday, and earlier infrastructure legislation passed by the House. “Florida will receive billions of dollars to repair and upgrade our highways, bridges, public transportation, drinking and wastewater systems, and broadband,” U.S. Rep. Lois Frankel said.
“DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas traveling to Miami next week to meet with Cubans, Haitians” via Bianca Padró Ocasio of the Miami Herald — Mayorkas will meet with Cuban and Haitian Americans in Miami next week, amid ongoing crises faced by both Caribbean countries, according to a White House official. The trip is part of the White House’s efforts to meet with members of the Cuban diaspora in South Florida, over a month since the July 11 anti-government protests broke out on the island, sparked by a shortage of food and medicine and a lack of access to vaccines. Dozens of protests have since taken place in Miami and throughout South Florida to protest the communist regime in Cuba.
“Dems renew push on elections bill that GOP vows to block” via The Associated Press — Democrats are renewing their push to enact their marquee voting bill, pledging to make it the first order of business when the Senate returns in the fall even though they don’t have a clear strategy for overcoming steadfast Republican opposition. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced his plan for floor action in September on the bill. The measure would affect virtually every aspect of the electoral process, curbing the influence of big money in politics, limiting the partisan considerations in drawing congressional districts, and expanding options for voting. Democrats acknowledge that their latest effort is doomed to fail, and that’s the point. They are looking to show that Republicans will not waver in their opposition to voting and election legislation.
“Stephanie Murphy gets closer look at Little Wekiva River disaster” via Martin E. Comas of the Orlando Sentinel — Rep. Murphy toured the Little Wekiva River in west Seminole County with a group of residents to get a close look at the growing amount of sand and silt clogging and drying large areas of the once-pristine and popular waterway. In a letter to the EPA last June, Murphy called for a federal probe of the deteriorating conditions of the river and pointed out that residents and environmental advocates say the large-scale reconstruction of Interstate 4, less than a football field’s length away from the Little Wekiva, is likely a main source of the sedimentation discharging into the river.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Surfside victims Mihai Radulescu, Maria Popa showed what it meant to be ‘genuine, caring’” via Julius Whigham II of the Palm Beach Post — Radulescu and his wife, Popa, were among the dozens of victims identified in the June 24 partial collapse of the Champlain Towers South condominium building in Surfside. Authorities recovered their remains on July 9. Radulescu died at the age of 82. Popa was 79. Records show that the couple lived on the tower’s fourth floor. An online tribute described Radulescu and Popa as friendly and positive. “When I was at my lowest of lows and most exhausting of days, it was like they had the foresight to show up — and when they did, they picked me up,” one person wrote. “They showed me what it means to be a genuine, caring, and proud individual.”
“Agency investigating Surfside collapse says on-site work may be done in a ‘few’ weeks” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — It may take years for the federal agency investigating the Surfside condo collapse to determine the cause of the June 24 building failure, but the National Institute of Standards and Technology now says it expects to complete all on-site sampling and testing at the Champlain Towers South condo property in the next “few weeks.” The agency, which launched its investigation on June 30, said Wednesday that investigators will study the foundation’s integrity, the strength of the materials used to support the building, and the conditions of the soil and rock below where the 12-story condo once was stood. The collapse killed 98 people in one of the deadliest building failures in the nation’s history.
“Bidder offering up to $120 million for Surfside condo property. Government purchase ‘unlikely’” via David Ovalle and Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — A private bidder has emerged to offer up to $120 million to buy the beachfront tract where the doomed Champlain Towers South building once stood, a development that comes as an effort for a publicly funded purchase for a future memorial site seems to have fizzled. The offer from a new, unnamed buyer was revealed Wednesday morning during the latest hearing on a slew of lawsuits over the June 24 collapse of the tower, which killed 98 people in one of the deadliest building failures in U.S. history.
“Miami-Dade let repairs slip at courthouse, and decades go by without recertification” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — Judge Bertila Soto has given this kind of tour for years now, a hands-on demonstration of the decay inside Miami-Dade County’s civil courthouse. In her hands at this moment: a wedge of painted plaster from a 1928 tower subject to chronic leaks and basement flooding. “You can peel off pieces of the wall,” Soto said from an emptied–out storage room on the 25th floor of the courthouse at 73 W. Flagler St. “This has been happening since 2013.” Once the centerpiece of municipal architecture in downtown Miami, with columned walls at the base and a ziggurat roof, the county’s 27-story courthouse now offers a case study in deferred maintenance and daunting deterioration.
“Requiem for a landmark? Dade courthouse’s future is uncertain, but its past is glorious” via David Ovalle of the Miami Herald — From the beginning, it was built to be a landmark. When it opened in 1928, the Dade County Courthouse was the tallest building in the entire Southeastern United States, towering over downtown Miami as a symbol of stability for a young boom town still reeling from a devastating Cat 4 hurricane and cratering real estate market. Early on, the 28-story tower hosted what would become a string of headline-grabbing trials, starting with the nation’s most notorious gangster, Al “Scarface” Capone, beating a perjury charge in 1930. But it’s really all the other business conducted inside the ornate building that made it so vital.
“Lawyers for Parkland school shooter Nikolas Cruz want public and media barred from pretrial hearings” via David Ovalle of the Miami Herald — The defense team for Cruz wants a judge to hold every single future pretrial court hearing in secret, arguing that more publicity will taint future jurors. One problem: the defense’s expert, a consultant who studies the effect of publicity on jurors, admits he doesn’t think such a drastic step is necessary. “I didn’t recommend full closure,” consultant Bryan Edelman told a Broward judge during a hearing Tuesday. The Miami Herald and a host of media outlets are objecting to the defense’s request.
“Deputy accused of child abuse fired from Broward Sheriff’s Office” via Nicole Lopez-Alvar and Roy Ramos of WPLG Local 10 News — A Broward Sheriff’s Office deputy who had been arrested for child abuse in 2019 has officially been fired from his position. According to the Broward Sheriff’s Office (BSO), former BSO Deputy Willard Miller has been terminated from the BSO after their Internal Affairs investigators investigated an incident two years ago involving a minor. According to police, Miller is accused of slamming a 15-year-old female student to the floor at Cross Creek School in Pompano Beach on Sept. 25, 2019. The incident was captured on a school surveillance video. Miller turned himself in on one third-degree felony count of child abuse without great bodily harm.
“Closings: Is bribery ‘how business is done in Tallahassee’ or was J.T. Burnette ‘blowing smoke’?” via Jeff Burlew of the Tallahassee Democrat — The public corruption case of businessman Burnette finally went to the jury on Wednesday, a month after his trial began at the U.S. Courthouse in Tallahassee. Government lawyers and the defense spent nearly the entire day delivering their closing arguments. Burnette, who bought and sold the Hotel Duval before acquiring the DoubleTree Hotel, is accused of giving former City Commissioner and Mayor Scott Maddox a $100,000 bribe in exchange for his help to kill a rival downtown hotel project. He’s also charged with facilitating $40,000 in bribes to Maddox from undercover FBI agents who posed as developers looking for an “inside track” on their purported real estate projects.
“It’s official: Amazon fulfillment center is coming to Tallahassee” via TaMaryn Waters of the Tallahassee Democrat — The Tallahassee-Leon County Office of Economic Vitality confirmed Amazon is the company behind Project Mango, which has been confidential until now but has been one of the worst kept secrets in the capital city. Last week, the Tallahassee Democrat reported obtaining a confidential letter from a Leon County official to an Amazon economic development policy manager pledging to work with the company. Amazon plans to create up to 1,000 new jobs with a minimum starting salary of $15 per hour — the largest private-sector job creation in Tallahassee’s history. The footprint of the fulfillment center will occupy 170 acres at 6720 Mahan Drive, the north side between Interstate 10 and Thornton Road.
Happening today — Florida Power & Light offers the media tours of its solar-powered battery, touted as the largest in the world, 10 a.m., Manatee Energy Storage Center, 19052 State Road 62, Parrish.
“There’s $5M on the line when Jupiter’s U.S. 1 bridge closes for replacement in spring 2023” via Katherine Kokal of the Palm Beach Post — If Jupiter’s U.S. 1 bridge is closed for two peak tourism seasons, the contractor replacing the aging span will lose out on $5 million. That’s the Florida Department of Transportation’s incentive to start and finish the $133 million replacement on time to avoid more traffic delays and headaches for residents and businesses during the winter months. State transportation officials last week presented the Jupiter Town Council with their plan to stop traffic on the bridge starting on March 13, 2023. That’s a year later than originally planned, according to previous reporting from The Palm Beach Post. But once the traffic detours start moving traffic to Alternate State Road A1A, so does a ticking clock.
— TOP OPINION —
“Senate infrastructure plan a boost for Florida” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — The infrastructure plan the Senate passed is a boon to Florida, a bipartisan achievement and a much-needed investment in the nation’s future. It was too bad, but entirely predictable, that Florida’s two senators could not hoist themselves from the partisan sideline to do what was best for the Sunshine State. As the bill heads to an uncertain fate in the House, congressional Democrats need to cement this victory by avoiding the temptation to overreach. The vote, 69-30, capped weeks of bipartisan negotiations, and Sen. Mitch McConnell joined 18 colleagues from his party in approving the $1 trillion package.
— OPINIONS —
“Living and dying with COVID-19” via Sammy Westfall of The Washington Post — The prospect of an express ticket out of the coronavirus pandemic spurred the fastest development of vaccines in human history. But disparities in access and stubborn anti-vaccine movements have meant that a world without the coronavirus looks more and more unlikely. There are nations learning to live with it. Most simply do not have that luxury. While some, including Germany and Israel, have vaccinated more than two-thirds of their populations, the entire continent of Africa has only fully vaccinated some 2% of its population. Seventeen months after the WHO declared a pandemic, the global divisions created by the no longer novel coronavirus are starker than ever.
“DeSantis gives children freedom to catch COVID-19” via Randy Schultz of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Because DeSantis seemed to back down just a little on school mask mandates, he then had to act as if he hadn’t backed down. In the last two weeks, reality has hammered at DeSantis’ denials about Florida, COVID-19 and children. Cases and hospitalizations have set record after record. Hospitals again are delaying elective surgeries. Florida leads the nation in pediatric COVID-19 hospitalizations. A Palm Beach County pediatrician called it an “alarming rise” that has affected not just teenagers but younger children and babies. Faced with those facts, DeSantis lied. He blamed the surge on illegal immigrants and deflected blame from unvaccinated adults, otherwise known as his base.
“ALEC and the FEC: Did right-wing organization violate campaign law and its own tax-exempt status?” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — It’s more than coincidence when Republican legislatures throughout the nation all start singing the same right-wing marching songs, as in the frenzy to bar critical race theory from public schools that aren’t even teaching the university-level discipline. That hysteria, an outlet for pent-up racism, has been fed not just by Fox “News” but also by a spider web of mostly tax-exempt political organizations in which the American Legislative Exchange Council is arguably the most significant.
“Cruise lines win. And DeSantis keeps losing — to judges enforcing conservative principles” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — A judge struck down DeSantis’ attempt to ban cruise lines from asking passengers to provide vaccine proof before boarding. The judge basically ruled that companies have a right to keep their passengers safe and that government has no right to stop that. Let’s pause here for a moment. Did you really need a judge to tell you that? That legal beatdown came after another judge ruled that the governor and his lackey legislators violated the U.S. Constitution by trying to arrest citizens who donate more than $3,000 to groups pushing to get issues like medical marijuana and smaller class sizes on statewide ballots.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
The battle over mask mandates in schools is getting tense. Education Commissioner Corcoran is warning Broward County schools to rescind their mask mandate or face sanctions … but the Biden administration says it will work to bypass the DeSantis administration.
Also on today’s Sunrise:
— The Governor is still spinning the stats for kids who are sick with COVID-19. Despite the surge in pediatric cases, DeSantis insists that the number of kids infected with the disease is the same as last year.
— Once again, Fried is appealing to DeSantis to change his mind about masks and start talking about the surge in COVID-19 cases.
— They may not want to talk about COVID-19 right now, but DeSantis and friends have started handing out $1,000 checks to teachers … a reward for their service last year during the pandemic. So, you had Corcoran threatening to cut off funding for districts that impose mask mandates while also handing out checks to teachers who masked up last year.
— And finally, two Florida Men: One is suing Facebook over censorship, the other is nursing a head wound after trying to hide from a police dog.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“This Orlando hotel room goes for $17,000 a night. Its biggest perk: Service” via Trevor Fraser of the Orlando Sentinel — The Royal Suite on the 16th floor of the Four Seasons Resort Orlando isn’t just the largest suite in Orlando. It doesn’t earn its $17,000 per night price tag with its crystal chandelier or views of Walt Disney World. For the clients who rent it, the real allure is the service. “We’re here to anticipate the guests’ needs,” said hotel manager Greg Viaud. “We keep ahead of the game.” Viaud wouldn’t disclose guests who have stayed in the Royal, though he said they range from celebrities to CEOs and even members of royal families. Privacy is one of the main draws of the suite for these megawealthy clients, who don’t blink at the price or hesitate to pay more for extra conveniences.
“What did Miami’s airport look like in the 1950s and ’60s? These photos will show you” via Jeff Kleinman of the Miami Herald — Some people call Miami International Airport a city. And other things, too. But it wasn’t always a maze of concourses and parking garages. Miami’s airport started as a simple airfield and grew into a simple and intimate place to fly commercial before a building boom in the 1960s through today. Yes, there was a time when you could pull right up to the terminal’s front door and park just a few steps away. Try that today, and you might just get a visit from police officers and a tow truck. Miami’s airport grew along with the surrounding metropolis.
“Broward woman scores $1 million on scratch-off from gift shop” via David Selig of WPLG Local 10 News — The scratch-off ticket that Nakia Williams bought at a Miami gift shop turned out to be quite the gift. Williams, 46, of Pembroke Pines, hit for the top prize in Florida Lottery’s Fastest Road to $1,000,000 game. Lottery officials say she decided to claim her winnings as a lump-sum payout of $790,000. Williams bought the $30 ticket at the Taurus Gift Shop at 1611 Northwest 12th Avenue in Miami. The retailer receives a $2,000 bonus commission.
“‘Jeopardy!’ officially taps Mike Richards as host” via Lesley Goldberg of The Hollywood Reporter — It’s official: Jeopardy! exec producer Richards will take over as the full-time host of the syndicated game show, replacing the late and great Alex Trebek. Additionally, Big Bang Theory alum Mayim Bialik will serve as the host of the Jeopardy! prime-time and spinoff series, including ABC’s recently announced National College Championship. Richards was but one of many guest hosts to effectively audition for the job. Others included Bialik, fan-favorite LeVar Burton and former Jeopardy! champs David Faber, Buzzy Cohen and Ken Jennings. Jennings will return to the daily syndicated show as a consulting producer. Jeopardy! will begin production on its 38th season this month. New episodes, hosted by Richards, begin Sept. 13.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Celebrating today are former U.S. Rep. Connie Mack IV, former Rep. Matt Caldwell and Alex Blair.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Happy Thursday! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,190 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
⚡ Situational awareness: The FDA is expected to authorize a third dose of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines for immunocompromised people as early as today. Go deeper.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Surprising new research shows the effectiveness of COVID vaccines fading faster than expected, raising fears inside the Biden administration about the health and messaging consequences for Americans.
Why it matters: “I think everybody believes this wanes over time. The question is to what extent,” a senior Biden official told Axios’ Caitlin Owens and Sam Baker.
- “Nobody wants to be behind the eight-ball here. We want to catch it before there’s an issue, and that’s why there is very intense scrutiny.”
What’s happening: All the COVID vaccines continue to offer almost 100% protection against death, and extremely strong protection against serious illness. Those findings have stayed consistent across the world.
- But a growing body of research shows that the vaccines are losing some potency against milder infections.
State of play: Specific numbers vary from study to study and country to country. But directionally, there’s a clear trend:
- Preliminary findings from the Mayo Clinic, which have not yet been peer-reviewed, show that the Pfizer vaccine is preventing significantly fewer infections now than before the Delta variant became dominant. The same study found a smaller drop in Moderna’s efficacy.
- The study has raised alarm bells within the Biden administration, as Axios reported yesterday. “If that’s not a wakeup call, I don’t know what is,” a senior Biden official told Axios.
Pfizer itself has said it believes its vaccines are losing around six percentage points of efficacy every two months.
- Research from Israel and the U.K. reached similar conclusions.
- Moderna has also said it believes boosters will be necessary.
The bottom line: The vaccines work incredibly well at protecting against severe disease and death, meaning the benefits of getting vaccinated are immense.
Illustration: Megan Robinson/Axios
Notable numbers of police officers across the country are refusing the COVID vaccine, ignoring mandates and leaning on their unions to back them up, Axios’ Russell Contreras reports.
- Why it matters: The Fraternal Order of Police, a national police union that represents 356,000 officers, estimates that more than 500 officers have died from COVID.
What’s happening: Denver’s top public safety leader said last week he’ll discipline police officers and sheriff’s deputies who ignore a mandate to get vaccinated. A Denver Police Protective Association survey found 57% of its members aren’t vaccinated.
- A tenth LAPD employee died last week from COVID complications, the L.A. Times reported. Half of the department remains unvaccinated.
- The San Francisco Deputy Sheriffs’ Association promised that deputies would quit en masse or seek early retirement over San Francisco Mayor London Breed’s new vaccine mandate for officers.
On April 14, President Biden announced a full U.S. troop withdrawal from Afghanistan by Sept. 11: “War in Afghanistan was never meant to be a multi-generational undertaking. … And it’s time to end the forever war.”
- This pair of maps shows what’s happened since then.
U.S. officials warn that the capital, Kabul, could be overrun sooner than originally feared. (WashPost)
- Go deeper: Our lead story from yesterday, “Inside the Biden administration as Afghanistan collapses.”
Photo: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images
For unknown reasons, Scotland’s Inverclyde region produces an above-average number of twins, giving it the nickname “Twinverclyde.”
- This fall, the primary schools added 15 pairs of twins — 13 of them pictured above.
The White House increasingly views rising gas prices as a potential political peril — and is asking some of the world’s biggest oil producers to pump more oil, Andrew Freedman writes in Axios Generate.
- A White House official told Axios that the administration can simultaneously push forward its ambitious climate agenda — while being “vigilant” that middle class families don’t suffer from a temporary surge in gas prices as the economy recovers.
Biden pointed out yesterday that his infrastructure bill includes no gas-tax increase: “[G]as prices are lower than they were early in this decade. But they’re still high enough to create a pinch on working families.”
From 2001-19, the built-up landscape of America grew by more than 14,000 square miles, the WashPost’s Zach Levitt and Jess Eng report from government “land cover” data released last month:
- “Suburbs are sprawling out in Arizona and Nevada as industries move to the Sun Belt, retirement communities are popping up in Florida as the baby boomer generation ages, and oil and natural gas wells have emerged across North Dakota and West Texas.”
These satellite photos show Greenville, Calif. — which had a population of 817 — before and after it was nearly obliterated by Northern California’s Dixie Fire, now the second largest in state history.
- A gas station, church, hotel, museum and bar were gutted in the tiny town, which dates to California’s gold rush. Some wooden buildings were 100+ years old. Go deeper.
Bruce Mehlman of Mehlman Castagnetti Rosen & Thomas found this clever way to visualize rising GOP populism, in a preview for Axios AM readers of one of the famous slide decks he uses for client talks.
- See the full deck, “Failures’ fallout.”
The N.Y. Times is rolling out a slew of subscriber-only newsletters from news and opinion writers, as a way of delivering more benefits to paying customers, Axios Media Trends author Sara Fischer reports.
- At least 18 new and existing newsletters will only be available to subscribers, beginning Aug. 16.
- Seven opinion newsletters will be introduced, said Kathleen Kingsbury, The Times’ Opinion editor. Writers include Times tech opinion columnist Kara Swisher; writer and sociologist Tressie McMillan Cottom; and Jay Caspian Kang, previously a writer-at-large at the Times Magazine.
Between the lines: The rise of independent publishing platforms like Substack is inspiring newsrooms to experiment with more personality-driven content, mostly via newsletters and podcasts.
- A few Times journalists have left for Substack.
- Signaling the case The Times can make in recruiting and retaining journalists, Kingsbury pointed to the paper’s “unrivaled audience, stability, and infrastructure.”
In a break from protocol, Pope Francis took a cellphone from an aide and chatted animatedly while standing at center stage in a Vatican auditorium for his weekly public audience yesterday, AP reports.
- The pope gestured with his free hand as if the caller could see him.
- He twice moved his right hand as if he were signing something.
This pope has had quite a lot to say about phones:
- He said in 2019 that priests taking cellphone pictures during Mass is “a very ugly thing”: “The priest says ‘lift up your hearts.’ He does not say: ‘Lift up your cell phones to take pictures.'”
- In 2017, he said: “What would happen if we treated the bible like we do our mobile phones? … If we turned around to retrieve it when we forgot it? If we carried it with us always, even a small pocket version?”
- He has also urged us to switch them off at times, and put them away during meals. But I guess not during audiences!
📬 Please invite your friends, family, colleagues to sign up here for Axios AM and Axios PM.
14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Illinois a red state — when it comes to COVID, CDC says
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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: Pelosi’s summer squeeze
DRIVING THE DAY
PELOSI FACES DOWN THE MODS — Speaker NANCY PELOSI is calling the House back from summer recess Aug. 23 to vote on the party’s $3.5 trillion budget, but she has a problem: Six moderate House Democrats, our ace House reporters Sarah Ferris and Heather Caygle report, have indicated that they’ll oppose the fiscal blueprint unless the speaker puts the Senate-passed BIF up for a vote at the same time.
The speaker can lose only three votes. So this sets up another Washington staredown, this time pitting Pelosi against some of her most electorally vulnerable members, whom she often bends over backward to protect.
If we know anything from covering Pelosi and the House the past decade, it’s that she runs her caucus with “an iron fist in a Gucci glove.” Her ability to corral her members — whether with sweeteners like committee posts or by simply scaring them into line — is almost legendary. Cross her at your own peril.
Senior Democrats aren’t panicking about the moderates’ threat — at least not yet. For one, none of them have gone on record with their complaints; typically if a member isn’t willing to say these sorts of things out loud, he or she will cave in the end. Even if they do eventually speak out, top Democrats say they’re confident in Pelosi’s ability to navigate it.
But the dynamic will definitely keep things interesting the next few weeks during an otherwise sleepy August recess.
IN CASE IT WASN’T CLEAR: Pelosi reiterated her stance during a House Democratic conference call Wednesday: no BIF vote in the House until the Senate passes its reconciliation bill. It’s simple math, she explained: She doesn’t have the votes to pass one without the other. “I’m not freelancing. This is the consensus of the caucus,” Pelosi said on the call. “The votes in the House and Senate depend on us having both bills.”
SPEAKING OF OUR CONGRESS TEAM … Marianne LeVine and Burgess Everett landed an interview Wednesday with Senate Majority Leader and man-of-the-hour CHUCK SCHUMER.
Their piece has quite a colorful lede: “Chuck Schumer got his progressives to swallow a bipartisan deal that tasted about as good to them as wilted spinach. Now he’ll need to bring his leery moderates along for the whole meal.” (For the record, we love spinach.)
It goes on to serve up some good nuggets: While Schumer isn’t known for twisting arms — he’s quite the opposite from Pelosi in that regard — he hit a wall a few weeks ago and “began to nudge harder than his genial nature suggests.” Schumer told Sen. BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.) that “if you want the moderates to vote with the progressive vision, you can’t vote no” on the BIF. “You don’t have that luxury.”
Then, he turned around and told Sens. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) and KYRSTEN SINEMA (D-Ariz.) the same: “If you won’t vote yes on the budget resolution, I can’t get them to vote yes” on the bipartisan bill.
Good Thursday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN’S THURSDAY:
— 10 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 11:15 a.m.: Biden will deliver remarks on prescription drug prices in the East Room.
— 12:20 p.m.: Biden will depart the White House en route to Wilmington, Del., where he is scheduled to arrive at 1:10 p.m.
VP KAMALA HARRIS’ THURSDAY: The VP will hold a meeting with businesses to talk about care policies at 2:15 p.m.
The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 12:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE and THE SENATE are out.
PLAYBOOK READS
Our top three reads this morning …
1) The NYT’s doyen of Capitol Hill, Carl Hulse, compares Democrats’ task of shepherding Biden’s $4.5 trillion agenda through Congress to the effort to pass the Affordable Care Act a decade ago. Then as now, success is far from certain. The money quote: “‘It’s like the 7-10 split in bowling,’ Senator EDWARD J. MARKEY, Democrat of Massachusetts and a veteran of the health care fight, said about the precision, persistence and luck that would be required to pull off the legislative two-step. ‘It happens, but it happens rarely.’”
2) ProPublica’s latest installment of lifestyles of the rich and famous, based on their (non-)payment of taxes: “Secret IRS Files Reveal How Much the Ultrawealthy Gained by Shaping Trump’s ‘Big, Beautiful Tax Cut,’” by Justin Elliott and Robert Faturechi: “In the first year after [DONALD] TRUMP signed the legislation, just 82 ultrawealthy households collectively walked away with more than $1 billion in total savings, an analysis of confidential tax records shows.
“Republican and Democratic tycoons alike saw their tax bills chopped by tens of millions, among them: media magnate and former Democratic presidential candidate MICHAEL BLOOMBERG; the Bechtel family, owners of the engineering firm that bears their name; and the heirs of the late Houston pipeline billionaire DAN DUNCAN.” ICYMI: Here’s the publication’s initial story, about how little the ultra-wealthy pay and how far they go to avoid income tax.
3) And WaPo’s Tom Hamburger, Rosalind Helderman and Amy Gardner delivering the alarming/sobering news that many election officials around the country fear for their safety as election conspiracies and denialism gain steam, courtesy of Trump. They write: “‘It used to be fun to be an election clerk, but it isn’t any more,’ [Canton Township, Mich., clerk MICHAEL SIEGRIST said.]
“Nine months after the 2020 election, local officials across the country are coping with an ongoing barrage of criticism and personal attacks that many fear could lead to an exodus of veteran election administrators before the next presidential race. … As Trump continues to promote the false notion that the 2020 White House race was tainted by fraud, there is mounting evidence that his attacks are curdling the faith that many Americans once had in their elections — and taking a deep toll on the public servants who work to protect the vote.”
CONGRESS
WHISTLEBLOWER’S ATTORNEY GOES TO WAR WITH HOUSE DEMS — Nearly two years after news of Trump’s Ukraine scheme hit the presses, the attorney for the famed whistleblower who started it all is in a contentious standoff with House Democrats. MARK ZAID, the prominent whistleblower attorney, has an op-ed in Insider blasting the House select panel on the Jan. 6 riot for hiring a person he claims has retaliated against whistleblowers. The NYT’s story on the skirmish
HMM — “Rand Paul discloses 16 months late that his wife bought stock in company behind covid treatment,” by WaPo’s Isaac Stanley-Becker: “Sen. RAND PAUL revealed Wednesday that his wife bought stock in Gilead Sciences — which makes an antiviral drug used to treat Covid-19 — on Feb. 26, 2020, before the threat from the coronavirus was fully understood by the public and before it was classified as a pandemic by the World Health Organization.
“The disclosure, in a filing with the Senate, came 16 months after the 45-day reporting deadline set forth in the Stock Act, which is designed to combat insider trading. … KELSEY COOPER, a spokeswoman for Paul, said the senator completed a reporting form for his wife’s investment last year but learned only recently, while preparing an annual disclosure, that the form had not been transmitted. He sought guidance from the Senate Ethics Committee, she said, and filed the supplemental report along with an annual disclosure Wednesday. She also said Paul’s wife, KELLEY, an author and former communications consultant, lost money on the investment, which she made with her own earnings.”
THE WHITE HOUSE
BIDEN’S BULLY PULPIT — “White House seizes an opportunity to whack DeSantis,” by Marc Caputo: “For the past two weeks, Biden and his allies have publicly escalated a war of words and with [Florida Gov. RON] DESANTIS on Twitter, in speeches by the president and in White House press briefings. Biden advisers see DeSantis — who has defiantly fought mask mandates as infections and hospitalizations skyrocketed in the battleground state — as a foil to a president whose strength is his empathetic style and safety-first response to coronavirus that helped him defeat DeSantis’ benefactor, President Trump, nine months ago.
“Amid the Covid explosion, DeSantis’ constant criticisms as well as his controversial policies and a barrage of media questions about the governor, White House advisers say Biden and the team had no choice but to take on the Republican. But the president has seldom gone to such lengths to train so much fire on a critic other than Trump.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
TRUMP VS. CHENEY HEATS UP — “Trump to meet with former Cheney ally about Wyoming primary challenge,” by Alex Isenstadt: “Trump is poised to sit down with HARRIET HAGEMAN, a Republican trial attorney who waged an unsuccessful 2018 campaign for governor of Wyoming, according to five people familiar with the matter. The meeting comes as Trump ramps up his effort to unseat [Rep. LIZ] CHENEY in next year’s GOP primary; the former president has met with several candidates in recent weeks at his Bedminster, N.J. golf club, with an eye toward making an eventual endorsement. …
“Hageman declined to comment when reached by phone Wednesday evening. A Trump spokesperson declined to comment. Hageman would be an unconventional candidate should she choose to challenge Cheney. She was a member of Cheney’s leadership team during Cheney’s short-lived 2014 Senate campaign. She has also contributed to Cheney twice: a $500 check in 2013, and one for $1,500 in 2016.”
COME TO YOUR CENSUS — “Redistricting sprint begins with major census data drop,” by Ally Mutnick and Zach Montellaro: “The Census Bureau’s long-awaited release of redistricting data Thursday will unleash a torrent of new state political maps in the weeks and months to come, starting with the handful of states pressed against early fall deadlines to enact new district boundaries.
“Altogether, the maps could tilt control of Congress for the next decade, but they’ll come out one by one at first. Strategists from both parties predict that some states will finalize maps as soon as September and that roughly half of the states will set their new lines by the end of the year. The rest will follow in the first few months of 2022.”
CUOMO LATEST — “Trooper harassed by Cuomo quickly became his driver,” by Albany Times-Union’s Brendan Lyons: “The State Police investigator who said Gov. ANDREW M. CUOMO sexually harassed her had moved up in the ranks of his protective detail quickly, securing a position as the governor’s driver in a much shorter timeframe than is normal, according to former senior members of the detail who are familiar with its machinations.
“Prominent women’s rights attorney GLORIA ALLRED issued a statement on behalf of the investigator, who is not being identified by the Times Union, saying she believes Cuomo ‘did the right thing’ when he announced his resignation. … It’s unclear whether Allred, who has represented other women who accused Cuomo of misconduct, was retained by the investigator in order to initiate a civil sexual harassment complaint against the governor.”
THE PANDEMIC
The latest headlines …
— “CDC urges COVID vaccines during pregnancy as delta surges,” by AP’s Lindsey Tanner and Mike Stobbe
— “FDA set to authorize extra Covid vaccine doses for immunocompromised patients,” by Adam Cancryn and Lauren Gardner
— “Texas Hospitals Are Already Overloaded. Doctors Are ‘Frightened by What Is Coming,’” by NYT’s Edgar Sandoval and Giulia Heyward in San Antonio
— “Covid surge prompts one Florida county to ask residents to use 911 sparingly,” by NBC’s David Li
— “Children’s hospitals are swamped with Covid patients — and it may only get worse,” by Dan Goldberg and Alice Miranda Ollstein
— “Gov. Newsom orders school employees to get vaccinated or be tested regularly,” by L.A. Times’ Howard Blume and John Myers
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
PULLOUT FALLOUT — “Biden administration tries to mobilize international diplomatic effort to halt Taliban,” by WaPo’s Karen DeYoung: “In the largest such gathering since U.S.-Taliban talks began nearly two years ago, representatives from Russia, China, Afghanistan’s regional neighbors, European powers, the European Union, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and the United Nations have converged on Doha, Qatar, for U.S.-led meetings with the militants.
“The hope is that sheer numbers and a unified stance — both during the Taliban meetings and in a tough joint statement to be issued after their last session Thursday — will disabuse the militants of any notion that there are cracks in international resolve to cut any Taliban government off from all diplomatic contact and assistance.”
— “Biden on Afghanistan: Not my problem,” by Nahal Toosi, Paul McLeary and Alexander Ward: “Inside the administration, top aides are just trying to keep up with the rapidly changing battlefield. U.S. officials now believe Kabul could be surrounded or fall under Taliban control within weeks, and even the future of the fortress-like U.S. Embassy is increasingly in doubt.
“The president, meanwhile, is holding firm to last spring’s decision to withdraw U.S. combat troops, calculating that war-weary voters would rather tune out the alarming developments in a conflict they’ve largely ignored. … A new U.S. military assessment says the national capital, Kabul, could fall to the Taliban in as quickly as a month, a person familiar with the intelligence told POLITICO. … According to three people knowledgeable about the situation, internal administration discussions have broached evacuating the U.S. Embassy in Kabul as a possibility; one person said the mission could be emptied by the end of this month.”
VALLEY TALK
WHAT BEZOS IS CELEBRATING — “NSA quietly awards $10 billion cloud contract to Amazon, drawing protest from Microsoft,” by WaPo’s Aaron Gregg: “The National Security Agency has quietly awarded a contract worth up to $10 billion to Amazon Web Services, setting off another high-stakes fight among rival tech giants over national security contract dollars.
“On July 21 the Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft filed a formal bid protest with the Government Accountability Office, an independent federal agency that handles contract disputes, after Microsoft applied for the opportunity and was rejected. A decision is expected by Oct. 29.”
MEDIAWATCH
QUITE A COLLAB — “Fox Nearing Deal to Buy TMZ,” by WSJ’s Joe Flint and Drew FitzGerald: “AT&T Inc. is nearing a deal to sell TMZ to Fox Corp., after a year of talks that involved persuading HARVEY LEVIN to sign off on a sale of the gossip news platform he co-founded, according to people familiar with the matter. The terms being negotiated would value TMZ, which includes a popular website and daily television show, at between $100 million and $125 million, the people said. While the on-again, off-again talks have heated up recently, people on both sides stressed there is no guarantee a deal will be reached.”
PAGING JEN PSAKI — “WH reporters roiled by ‘spacing constraints’ excuse to limit access to Biden Q&As,” by N.Y. Post’s Steven Nelson: “President Biden’s recent interactions with reporters in the spacious White House East Room have resembled press conferences, but with a twist: his staff selects which reporters attend, citing ‘spacing constraints’ for why they exclude most White House correspondents.
“The nearly 3,000-square foot event space is the largest room in the White House and can fit hundreds of people. But reporters interested in attending one of the semi-regular Biden forums must RSVP electronically and then White House staff pick a small number who are allowed to attend alongside the rotating daily press pool.”
DESSERT (OR SOMETHING)
HEADS UP — “Higher but still slim odds of asteroid Bennu slamming Earth,” AP
PLAYBOOKERS
IN MEMORIAM — “Remembering a True Leader through CIA Crisis and Controversy,” by Gen. Michael Hayden in the Cipher Brief: “I am contemplating the news that former CIA Acting General Counsel John A. Rizzo is gone, the victim of a heart attack this past weekend, and I’m finding it hard to imagine a world without him. … John found himself at the center of every major national security and intelligence success or failure, victory or defeat, honor or scandal for most of our post-Vietnam, post-Watergate history.”
— “Donald Kagan, leading neo-conservative historian, dead at 89,” by AP’s Hillel Italie: “Through his books, speeches and media commentary, Kagan became a leading conservative voice in the otherwise liberal field of history, supporting military action abroad and adherence to the Western canon at home. He backed the wars in Vietnam and Iraq and questioned the patriotism of protesters. He disdained multicultural programs and pushed in vain to establish a special Western Civilization course at Yale.”
MEDIA MOVES — Ming Li is joining POLITICO’s data and graphics team. She most recently was a data visualization reporter for the Financial Times’ industry publications. … Tracie Potts, a national correspondent for NBC News, will move on later this year after a more than 20-year career with the company to become executive director of the Eisenhower Institute at Gettysburg College. More
TRANSITIONS — Sarah Baron is now campaign director of economy campaigns at the Hub Project. She previously was senior campaigns director at Climate Power 2020. … Rebecca Drago is now deputy comms director for Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.). She previously was comms director for Rep. Jason Crow (D-Colo.) and is a Joe Cunningham alum. … Jay Boyd is joining Bullpen Strategy Group as director in the strategic comms practice. He previously was a manager at FP1 Strategies.
… Jennifer Nord Mallard has been named head of government affairs for Tempus Labs. She most recently was head of the health care practice at the Vogel Group, and is a Mayo Clinic alum. … Jonathan Fera is the new comms and marketing officer for Milwaukee’s Department of City Development and the Port Milwaukee. He previously was deputy press secretary for Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.).
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: George Soros (91) … Ed Feulner (8-0) … HuffPost’s Dave Jamieson … Mike Kelleher of the 2Blades Foundation … Brian Devine … Brianna Puccini of Sen. Deb Fischer’s (R-Neb.) office … Matt Sparks of House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s office … Casey Nelson of Rep. Ronny Jackson’s (D-Texas) office … Liz Hipple of the Joint Economic Committee … Bob Jensen … Google’s Nick Meads … BuzzFeed’s Nidhi Prakash … Justin Folsom … Molly French … Brandi Travis … CNN’s Kyle Blaine … Angela Kuefler of Global Strategy Group … CBS’ Jericka Duncan … Toby Burke … Stand Up America’s Kim Hall … Kelley McCormick … Tristan Fitzpatrick … Doris Truong of the Poynter Institute … WaPo’s Karen Attiah … Melanie Sheppard of EY … former FHA Administrator Nicole Nason … former Rep. Connie Mack IV (R-Fla.) … POLITICO’s Heather Richards and Julie Lasheski … Karyn Posner-Mullen … Chevron’s Trudi Boyd … Lesley Fulop … Molly Pfaffenroth of the National Grocers Association … Tess Crampton … Stephen Claeys … Dana Berardi … Thurgood Marshall Jr. … Christina Hartman … Kristin Sheehy … WilmerHale’s Bill McLucas … Audrey Jones … Uber’s Tony West
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
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Mask Nazis Remain Silent About the Biden Border Super-Spreader Event
Top O’ the Briefing
The Biden Border Nightmare Rages On
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I thought that the Liberace piñata was uncalled for.
We’ve got a shorter, delayed Briefing today due to some family circumstances. The show must go on, of course, but sometimes it gets interrupted a bit.
The Biden-Fauci administration is in full scold mode these days, constantly haranguing the public about the need to wear our COVID coverings at all times to avoid mass extinction. We are supposed to be living in fear and acquiescing to the tyrannical whims of our elected officials, all in the name of public safety.
Here’s the thing though: They’re all full of it.
The heavy hand of the government is trying to keep regular folk like us from enjoying life while the likes of America’s Biggest Eventual Regret get to party until they drop. The Democratic elites are constantly getting caught ignoring the rules that we are told are necessary to keep the public safe.
While all of that is going on, something even more insidious is happening along our border with Mexico. Illegal aliens of uncertain health status are being allowed by Joe Biden’s puppet masters to waltz into the U.S. and infect anyone they please.
Bryan wrote yesterday about the mayor of Laredo, Texas, referring to the situation as a real “public health crisis.”
The pathetically open border isn’t just letting waves of Delta variant carriers enter the country. The drug cartels are also aware of the ease of passage into the United States.
Joe Biden and the commies running his brain don’t care if you get COVID. Or if you get shot by a criminal from the Sinaloa cartel. Everything these people say about public health is a lie. Anthony Fauci should be getting sued by every business owner who went broke from being shut down last year. Any American who still believes in this administration and the criminally ignorant Fauci is too stupid to be left in a room that isn’t toddler-proofed.
The Joe Biden Mexican border super-spreader event is the real threat to American security, not the dude with the horns on his hat who went to the Capitol on January 6. The people tasked with protecting us are endangering U.S. citizens every day because they have worked themselves into such a state of political correctness that they can’t craft any real border policy.
Until they shut down that border, they should shut their mouths about public safety.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
Felonious Punk Gets Nine-Year Sentence, Longest Yet For a BLM-Antifa Thug
Revisiting My Forecasts on Afghanistan, the Pandemic, and Technological Disruption
[VIDEO] Leftist Hatred for ‘Anti-Islamic’ Hungary with Raymond Ibrahim
Don’t Be Fooled: Andrew Cuomo’s Downfall Is All About Politics
Will Manchin and Sinema Stand Strong Against Pressure to Spend Another $3.5 Trillion?
Big Disappointment for Biden: Khamenei Says Americans Are ‘Liars,’ Doesn’t Want Negotiations
Beyond Farce: Biden Wants OPEC to Pump More Oil While He Strangles U.S. Energy Production
CDC Corrects ‘Mistake’ with Florida’s Weekend COVID Numbers
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: Liberals Look in the Mirror and Scream
Politifact Gets Taken to the Woodshed Over Fact Check About Texas Democrats Being Subject to Arrest
Rand Paul: ‘Without Question’ Censorship of Members of Congress is Concerning Pattern
China’s Eating Our STEM Field Lunch, But at Least There’s ‘Ecofeminism’
School Board Bans ‘Fatally Flawed’ Critical Race Theory: ‘Just Garbage’
“The Week” is Weak on Facts About the Gavin Newsom Recall
Cam&Co. Michigan Prosecutor Backs Off Gun Possession Cases
Potential Domestic Terrorist Highlights Another Issue
Skip the investigation and fire Chris Cuomo?
Elon Musk: ‘I feel like I’m in a Dilbert cartoon quite frequently’
VIP
The Left Wastes No Time Talking About a Cuomo Comeback
Get Your Kid Out While You Can: Oregon Dumbs Down Public Schools to ‘Help’ Students of Color
Woke Politicians Can’t Even Say the Words ‘Black Crime,’ Let Alone Deal With It
Democrats Look to Make GOP Walk the Plank on Debt Limit Increase
Biden ‘Checking’ How Much of a Dictator He Can Be With Mask Mandates
Around the Interwebz
There are some memories here. Greenblatt’s Deli, A Sunset Boulevard Landmark Since 1926, Is Closing
Zoom’s new focus mode could keep students from distracting each other
Bee Me
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Kabana Gallery
Kabana Comedy
Peanut butter is an incredible aphrodisiac. Not on the first date though.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Cryptocurrency in the Senate
Plus: A bird’s-eye breakdown of a few very full legislative days.
The Dispatch Staff | 3 |
Happy Thursday! The Dispatch’s softball season continues …
… because our playoff game was rained out. We’ll give it another go next week.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- Consumer prices continued to climb in July, with the Bureau of Labor Statistics reporting a 0.5 percent month-over-month increase in the Consumer Price Index, putting prices 5.4 percent higher than July of last year. Oil and gas, used cars, hotels, and airline fares were the biggest drivers of the inflation.
- After an hours-long amendment “vote-a-rama,” the Senate passed Democrats’ $3.5 trillion budget resolution on a 50-49 party-line vote in the wee hours of Wednesday morning. The vote was less a piece of concrete legislation than a measure of intent, authorizing congressional committees to develop specific legislation in the months ahead along the resolution’s broad spending guidelines. Even the sticker price may be subject to change: Sen. Joe Manchin, a crucial swing vote, voted yes on the resolution, but said in a subsequent statement that he had “serious concerns” about passing a $3.5 trillion bill.
- The White House on Wednesday called on the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to increase production and exports, arguing that rising oil prices could imperil the ongoing economic recovery from the pandemic.
- A new CDC study found no increased risk of miscarriage among pregnant women who receive Pfizer and Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccines. “COVID-19 vaccination is recommended for all people 12 years and older,” the agency said in a Wednesday statement, “including people who are pregnant, breastfeeding, or trying to get pregnant now or might become pregnant in the future.”
- Two days after the U.S. slapped new sanctions on Belarus and its authoritarian leader Alexander Lukashenko, the Lukashenko regime took several retaliatory actions Wednesday, including revoking its consent of the appointment of U.S. ambassador Julie Fisher and suspending negotiations of a number of joint projects with the U.S. government.
- A federal judge on Wednesday rejected the effort of Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell, and Mike Lindell to dismiss the defamation lawsuits brought against them by Dominion Voting Systems.
Crypto Takes Center Stage in the Senate
When Senate and White House negotiators released the full text of their bipartisan infrastructure package last week, there was bound to be some bickering over surprises that ended up in the 2,702-page behemoth of a bill. They’re building a train station where?My tax dollars are going toward studying what?
There was some of that. But the final snag that reared its head prior to the bill’s passage in the Senate earlier this week had nothing to do with roads or bridges. Rather, it concerned tax reporting requirements on cryptocurrency brokers.
Despite its $1.2 trillion topline figure, the infrastructure deal “only” authorizes about $550 billion in new spending. Although the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates the package will add about $256 billion to the deficit over the next decade, the agreement’s negotiators maintain that it’s fully paid for: By repurposing unspent COVID relief funds, recovering fraudulent unemployment insurance claims from the past year, delaying a Medicare rebate, and cracking down on the burgeoning cryptocurrency market, which by some estimates has surpassed $2 trillion in size.
The bill wouldn’t implement any new taxes on cryptocurrency—the government currently treats it as property and imposes a capital gains tax on any profits earned—but theoretically, mandatory third-party reporting to the IRS would increase compliance. If you know the IRS is aware of all your Bitcoin transactions, you’re less likely to attempt to evade the taxes you owe. Congress’ Joint Committee on Taxation estimated the clause would generate about $28 billion in revenue over the next 10 years.
The alternative to the cryptocurrency pay-for was a bolstering of IRS enforcement that Republicans balked at, so the digital asset provision remained in the bill—but the industry wasn’t happy about it. A joint statement from the Blockchain Association, Coinbase, Coin Center, Ribbit Capital, and Square claims the clause would “place unworkable requirements on crypto technology,” classifying as brokers even crypto market participants who don’t engage in any trading.
“Whether it’s a miner, or an operator, or a validator, they’re not providing the service that a broker is … where they’re bringing two entities together to effectuate a financial transaction,” Perianne Boring, founder and president of the Chamber of Digital Commerce, a trade association that advocates for the digital asset and blockchain industry, told The Dispatch. “That’s not what miners do. … They’re running the network itself—and they don’t have clients.”
The Latest on Congress’ Spend-a-Rama
Yesterday was a very sleepy day in Washington—and not just because the heat index reached 107 °F. The day before, the Senate slogged through a 15-hour-long “vote-a-rama” amendment process—a prerequisite to adopting a budget resolution through which Democrats hope to pass their $3.5 trillion “human infrastructure” package later this year. The majority party’s power to block amendment votes is limited in the budget reconciliation process, and the minority party typically takes advantage. Although the votes are non-binding and almost entirely performative, Republicans forced Democrats to take a stance on a host of hot button issues: critical race theory, fracking, federal funding for abortions, and more. The whole thing wrapped up around 4 a.m. Wednesday morning.
But unanimous, 99-0 symbolic votes against defunding the police are far from the only thing the Senate’s been up to this week. It’s both passed the aforementioned $1.2 trillion infrastructure package and adopted its budget resolution for fiscal year 2022. The latter was strictly along party lines, but 19 Republicans—including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell—bucked Donald Trump to cross the aisle and support the former.
“Infrastructure is popular with both Republicans and Democrats,” McConnell told the Wall Street Journal. “The American people, divided, sent us a 50-50 Senate and a narrowly divided House. I don’t think the message from that was, ‘Do absolutely nothing.’ And if you’re going to find an area of potential agreement, I can’t think of a better one than infrastructure, which is desperately needed.”
Both legislative vehicles now head to the House, where they will be taken up at some point in the next few weeks. We’ve only got so much space here, but for more on the process, be sure to read Harvest and Ryan’s Uphill from this week—and ensure you’re subscribed to receive it in your inbox by clicking here!
As Harvest and Ryan note, the reconciliation process is now punted to the various committees, who have a framework, budget, and deadline under which to operate. Per a letter from Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, the respective House and Senate committees have until September 14 to draft the legislation. But differences among progressive and moderate Democrats mean a bumpy road ahead.
Worth Your Time
- Writing in his Substack newsletter yesterday, Erick Erickson spoke effectively to many of our country’s institutional woes. “The United States is now fairly evenly divided and no one trusts institutions,” he writes. “The media has destroyed its own credibility. The bureaucracy can be bullied by special interests. People are too cynical to trust politicians. So they trust their friends and a community that each has increasingly built online or through political interaction to look and think just like themselves. The result is now a handful of groups that claim independent thought, expert input, political power at different levels, and remarkably stake out positions to be exactly opposite the other.”
- In his latest Slow Boring post, Matt Yglesias attempts to answer one of the more pressing questions of our time: Why has everyone gone so crazy? “Most people don’t actually need to consume any political news to decide which coalition they align with and then vote accordingly,” he writes. “But that would be boring. What’s entertaining is to tell people that we’re not just having the same old political arguments over and over again, but that the people on the other side of those arguments are a direct and immediate threat to you and your family. … This is a really big country. There are over 100,000 K-12 schools in the United States. If you assume optimistically that in any given year, one out of every 100 teachers say or do anything racist at any school in the United States, that still leaves you with 1,000 racist teacher incidents per year. You could do a dozen ‘racist teacher’ stories per week and still be leaving racist teachers on the table. But at the same time, some other outlet could be doing 1,000 ‘woke administrator out of control’ stories per week. And we’ll all be clicking and sharing and arguing about those stories nonstop.”
Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- In this week’s Capitolism(🔒), Scott Lincicome breaks down the “tens of billions of dollars for subsidies to renewable energy companies” contained within the bipartisan infrastructure bill just passed by the Senate. He argues that “most of the bill just re-ups the same industrial policy model—top-down subsidies doled out by federal bureaucrats—that has repeatedly proven a failure in the United States, imposing high costs and often undermining, rather than advancing, the government’s very own objectives.”
- Yesterday’s Dispatch Podcastalso analyzed the infrastructure bill, as well as the much larger “human infrastructure” bill that Democrats hope to pass via budget reconciliation on a party-line vote. The gang also discusses a recent report from the U.N. on the state of climate change and discouraging news about the Taliban’s string of victories in Afghanistan. They also bid good riddance to New York Governor Andrew Cuomo.
- Jonah’s midweek G-File(🔒) examines Cuomo’s resignation, and notes that, while it’s a good thing the governor is resigning, it’s not necessarily a great sign for our political institutions that that took as long as it did. “While it’s good that norms against piggishness are being strengthened, it’s dismaying that the more important norms that Cuomo violated seem to be weakening,” Jonah writes. Cuomo, he points out, not only blundered into one of the pandemic’s deadlier policy mistakes by forcing nursing homes to receive patients early on—he subsequently did his best to spike investigations into the matter. “What’s unforgivable is that Cuomo knew he screwed up. He knew his decision was disastrous. And he covered up the evidence while preening over his ‘leadership.’”
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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32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— Independent redistricting commissions are most common out West. — Democrats currently dominate the House delegations from the West Coast and Southwest, and that is likely to continue. — However, Republicans may be able to make up a little ground, thanks in part to California losing a seat and Oregon gaining one. — Democrats can gerrymander Nevada and New Mexico, but it will be difficult for them to squeeze an additional seat out of these small states. Redistricting out WestThe states of the West have often been on the cutting edge of American political reform movements. Prior to the passage of the 19th Amendment, which guaranteed women the right to vote across the nation, several states had already approved women’s suffrage, and 10 of the first 11 states to do so were in the West: Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, Idaho, Washington, California, Arizona, Oregon, Montana, and Nevada (the lone exception was Kansas). More recently, the West has also been in the vanguard of voting by mail. Oregon was the first state to switch to all-mail voting, and it has been joined by several other western states. And the West is also a leader in independent redistricting commissions. Of the 10 states that we classify as having independent/nonpartisan congressional redistricting systems, seven are in the West: Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, and Washington (the others, back east, are Michigan, New Jersey, and Virginia, and only the New Jersey system was in place prior to this decade’s round of redistricting). These commissions can work in different ways. The Washington state commission has developed a reputation for protecting incumbents, which likely helped Republicans, at least earlier in the last decade. The Arizona commission emphasized competitiveness last decade, which frustrated Republicans and aided Democrats. California’s commission tore up the state’s existing districts last decade, creating a map that ended up breaking heavily in the favor of Democrats (although, as we note below, political realignment was a major part of Democratic gains in California last decade). In this week’s edition of our ongoing congressional redistricting series, we’ll be looking at the West Coast and the Southwest — specifically, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, and Washington. We’ll be looking at the remainder of the West, as well as some states in the Great Plains, next week. The past couple of weeks, we’ve been looking at the Greater South, a region that Republicans dominate. But out West, Democrats dominate. Under the 2010s congressional apportionment, these seven states held 86 of the 435 House seats (20% of the total), and Democrats currently control 65 of those seats (76% of the total). Democrats hold an edge in all seven of these states, although that advantage is only 5-4 in Arizona and 2-1 in New Mexico. Joe Biden also carried all seven of these states, although Arizona and Nevada are swing states. These seven states will continue to hold 86 seats based on the 2020 reapportionment, as California is losing a seat and Oregon is gaining one. We do not expect much to dramatically change in redistricting in these states, but this trade between California and Oregon may have the effect of netting the Republicans a seat. Let’s take a look at these seven states in detail. But one important note before we begin: Later today (Thursday, Aug. 12), the Census Bureau is going to be releasing the actual, granular population data that will allow states to start drawing districts. In some or many instances, this actual data might look different than the 2019 estimates we’ve been citing in the course of our redistricting series. So we, and many others, are very curious to see what the actual numbers look like, and we’ll have more to say about it in future editions of our redistricting series and in our analysis of the actual redistricting maps that will emerge in the coming months. ARIZONANumber of seats: 9 (no change from 2010s) Party breakdown in 2012: 5-4 D Current party breakdown: 5-4 D Most overpopulated district: AZ-7 (Phoenix) Most underpopulated district: AZ-2 (Tucson) Who controls redistricting: Commission 2012 control: Commission Arizona not gaining a 10th seat was one of the biggest surprises of the 2020 congressional reapportionment. In fact, 2020 marked the first census since the 1950 round that Arizona did not gain at least one seat in Congress — the state’s growth in recent decades has been especially robust, as its population has doubled in the last 30 years, going from 3.7 million residents in 1990 up to about 7.3 million today. Even with that type of growth, the Arizona map will continue to feature nine congressional districts. While some states have adopted redistricting commissions fairly recently, Arizona’s was established to draw maps immediately after the 2000 census, as voters approved the creation of a commission via a referendum that year. But last decade, the legitimacy of the commission was tested. In 2012, Arizona Republicans were frustrated after the commission-drawn map elected a 5-4 Democratic congressional delegation, even as then-President Obama lost the state by nine points in his reelection bid. Legislative Republicans charged that the commission’s authority was unconstitutional, and took their case to the Supreme Court. But the high court ruled that voters could transfer jurisdiction over redistricting away from legislatures, so the Arizona commission was upheld. Republicans believed that last decade’s tiebreaking member overly helped the Democrats and unsuccessfully tried to have her removed from the commission. This time, the GOP seems happier with the tiebreaker. Nestled in the southeastern corner of the state, AZ-2 is the only district that currently does not contain any of Maricopa County (home to Phoenix, as well as over 60% of the state’s residents) — it is also the most underpopulated district, and it will need to pick up about 75,000 residents. It seems likely that the district will simply pick up some communities near Tucson, or perhaps expand its holdings in the city itself. Assuming its configuration stays similar, longer-term trends suggest the district will stay Democratic: after Mitt Romney carried it by nearly three percentage points in 2012, President Biden did so by about 11 points. After last decade’s remap was finalized, many Republican complaints centered on the redrawn AZ-1. This vast rural district includes both the Hopi and the Navajo nations, in the northeastern corner of the state, but for 2012, it dropped much of heavily GOP Yavapai County. Democrats captured the seat in 2008 with then-state Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick. Two years later, Kirkpatrick lost to Republican Paul Gosar by 13,583 votes — Gosar carried Yavapai County by just over 20,000 votes. As an aside, Kirkpatrick has one of the most interesting career arcs of any current member. For 2012, Gosar moved over to the redrawn AZ-4 (now the most heavily GOP seat in the state), while Kirkpatrick reclaimed the swingier AZ-1. Kirkpatrick, impressively, held on in 2014, then ran unsuccessfully for Senate in 2016 against the late Sen. John McCain (R-AZ). She then moved to a new district herself, winning AZ-2 in 2018 and 2020. She is retiring this cycle. Though AZ-1 narrowly supported the GOP presidential nominees in 2012 and 2016, Rep. Tom O’Halleran (D, AZ-1) has represented the district since Kirkpatrick vacated it, in 2016. Ironically, last year, as the district finally voted blue at the presidential level, O’Halleran had the closest race of his career — he was held to a three-point win. It would not be hard for the commission to make AZ-1 more Republican-leaning: it could simply take in more of Yavapai County, or reach further into Pinal County, a fast-growing county that has seen sprawl from the Phoenix area. It seems unlikely that the commission will alter AZ-3, a Hispanic-majority seat held by Rep. Raúl Grijalva (D, AZ-3). The 3rd District forms a triangle, running from Tucson to Yuma, then up to Phoenix. Similarly, it’s hard to see major changes to Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego’s AZ-7 — it is also heavily Hispanic by composition, but it is a much more compact seat centering on downtown Phoenix. Elsewhere in Maricopa County, it is hard to game out exactly what the commission will do in the suburban Phoenix seats. Since the state isn’t adding or losing any seats, the commission could take a minimal change approach. In 2020, Democrats targeted Rep. Dave Schweikert (R) in AZ-6, a district that includes much of Scottsdale — he held on 52%-48%, so any similar seat could be swingy. On either side of AZ-6, Reps. Andy Biggs (R, AZ-5) and Debbie Lesko (R, AZ-8) both won by close to 20 points last year, and each would be favored under similar lines (Biggs has been mentioned as a potential statewide candidate in 2022, but any competent Republican could hold his seat). If the commission prioritizes creating competitive seats, it may unpack AZ-9, giving its Democratic voters to adjacent districts. AZ-9, which sits east of Phoenix and includes communities like Tempe and Mesa, was created for 2012. Initially, it was a true bellwether seat, as it basically matched the national popular vote that year — but in 2020, Biden cleared 60% in the district. Now-Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) was the 9th District’s first representative — when she vacated it to run for Senate in 2018, then-Phoenix Mayor Greg Stanton ran as a Democrat and held the seat by a 61%-39% margin. In fact, the only Republican to ever carry AZ-9 in a statewide race was the late Sen. McCain in his 2016 race against Kirkpatrick. Map 1 shows an Arizona map with minimal changes, although the marginal AZ-1 flips from a narrow Biden-won seat to a narrow Trump-won seat, while AZ-6 takes in all of Scottsdale and gets slightly more competitive (but is still a Trump-won seat). Map 1: Hypothetical Arizona map with minimal changesCALIFORNIANumber of seats: 52 (down 1 from 2010s) Party breakdown in 2012: 38-15 D Current party breakdown: 42-11 D Most overpopulated district: CA-42 (Western Riverside County) Most underpopulated district: CA-28 (Westside LA/Hollywood) Who controls redistricting: Commission 2012 control: Commission The U.S. House of Representatives reached its current-sized voting membership of 435 after the 1910 census, and it has had the same-sized membership ever since, with the exception of a temporary expansion to 437 to account for Alaska and Hawaii becoming states in the late 1950s. In that initial 435-seat apportionment for the 1910s, California had 11 House members — tied with Iowa, Kentucky, and Wisconsin. The Golden State now has nearly five times that number of members (53), although the state’s explosive growth has slowed in recent years. The state did not add any seats in the 2010 reapportionment round, which was the first time it failed to add a seat following a decennial census. This most recent reapportionment represented a new, dubious first for California — the state is actually losing a seat, going from 53 to 52, though it still has by far the biggest House delegation (Texas will be second at 38 seats). The loss of a seat will force California’s independent redistricting commission to chop a district. Beyond that, it’s unclear how much the commission, which is in charge for the second time after voters created it in 2010, will tweak the lines. The commission, which by law cannot take partisan data or incumbent residence into account, dramatically changed the state’s map a decade ago. That new map put 27 incumbents into 13 districts and created 14 with no incumbent; seven incumbents retired, and another seven lost either to members of their own party or members of the other party (California uses a top-two election system, in which the top two finishers in an all-party first round of voting advance to the November general election). The commission injected some competitiveness into a state that had hardly any of it under a Democratic-drawn incumbent protection map in place for the 2000s: Just a single seat switched hands that entire decade, as Democrats started the decade with a 33-20 edge that became a 34-19 advantage. Democrats immediately netted four seats in the 2012 election, and they were up to a lopsided 46-7 edge by the 2018 election. Republicans recovered some of those seats in 2020, clawing back four Biden-carried districts. Four of the nine Biden-won seats held by Republicans are in California, including the only three that Biden won by double-digits: Reps. Mike Garcia (R, CA-25), Young Kim (R, CA-39), and David Valadao (R, CA-21) all hold districts that Biden carried by about 10 points apiece. The fourth Biden-district California Republican, Rep. Michelle Steel (R, CA-48), holds a much more marginal seat (Biden won it by just 1.5 points). So one of the big questions about the commission is whether the commission will merely tweak the last decade’s map, given that it was already drawn by a commission as opposed to legislators, or whether the members will take a wrecking ball to the existing map, much like the commission did a decade ago. This question is unanswerable at this point (at least from our perspective). California was once known for hard-edged gerrymanders. Congressional scholar David Mayhew has noted that a California Republican gerrymander in advance of the 1952 election (along with one in New York) contributed greatly to the Republicans winning a slim House majority in that election, which was one of only two House majorities the Republicans won in a more than six-decade stretch from the early 1930s to early 1990s (the other came in 1946). More recently, California Democratic power broker Rep. Phil Burton crafted a strong gerrymander after the 1980 census, pushing a 22-21 Democratic delegation to a 28-17 edge. Voters threw out the map in a 1982 statewide ballot issue, but Burton crafted another, similar gerrymander that outgoing Gov. Jerry Brown (D-CA) — then serving his first eight-year stint as governor — signed right before leaving office. If Democrats still retained gerrymandering power in California — and they would have it even if Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA) is ousted in a recall next month because Democrats hold veto-proof state legislative majorities — they likely could squeeze several more seats out of the state by hurting some or all of the Biden-district Republicans and also potentially going after at least one of two prominent Central Valley Republicans: House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R, CA-23) and Rep. Devin Nunes (R, CA-22), the former chairman of the Intelligence Committee. But Democrats do not have that power. Rather, the commission will be drawing the lines. Now, it is fair to wonder whether Democrats will end up with something of a de facto edge on the commission. A decade ago, Democrats gained advantages in the process through out-organizing Republicans, as ProPublica noted at the time. Additionally, California is an overwhelmingly Democratic state, so even on a commission with five Democrats, five Republicans, and four members not affiliated with either party, one might expect the commission to lean Democratic to some extent, argues independent California pollster Adam Probolsky: “We have a progressive state. So even though the commission is mandated to have No Party Preference voters, remember, independent voters look and think just like their neighbors — they just don’t have loyalty to a party. So those independents are going to lean progressive.” All that said, it would also be unfair to describe the last decade’s map as a Democratic gerrymander. Rather, it was a map that created a number of competitive seats that Democrats were able to capture, and it also created a number of safe Republican suburban seats in Southern California that became much less Republican over the course of the decade, to the point where Democrats were able to win several of them. For instance, Joe Biden did 15 points better than Barack Obama did in 2012 in both San Diego and Orange counties, which are the second and third-largest sources of votes in the state and where Democrats flipped several House seats last decade. A lot of that is realignment, not gerrymandering. One thing that does stand out in the state’s demographics is that many districts in the Los Angeles area are underpopulated. Scott Lay, who produces The Nooner newsletter on California state politics, suggests that one possibility is that an East Los Angeles district may be eliminated, with the districts held by Reps. Grace Napolitano (D, CA-32) and Lucille Roybal-Allard (D, CA-40) as possibilities (both are in their 80s, so either or both could retire). One other possibility is that Rep. Karen Bass’ (D, CA-37) district west of downtown could be eliminated if she decides to run for mayor of Los Angeles, as has been recently rumored — that would be a way to effectively protect all the other incumbents (readers will remember that Bass was one of Joe Biden’s reported vice presidential options). Darry Sragow, publisher of the California Target Book, recently noted that LA County contains all or part of 14 congressional districts, and that the ideal population size for California districts this decade will be about 760,000 people. Combined, the 14 LA County districts are currently about 575,000 people short of that target, meaning that “It is almost certain that the one seat California must give up will come from there.” (Although, remember, we’re working off census estimates, not the actual census numbers, which are coming out later today.) Democrats would surely prefer the eliminated district come from elsewhere in the state, with the Central Valley as a candidate. Assuming a Democratic LA County seat is cut, perhaps Democrats can make up for that by beating one or more of the Biden-district Republicans — Garcia seems the most vulnerable to us, in part because of a conservative voting record (he backed both objections to the Electoral College certification in January) — or by getting positive district alterations elsewhere. That said, the commission is difficult to handicap, so we’re just going to have to wait and see. HAWAIINumber of seats: 2 (no change from 2010s) Party breakdown in 2012: 2-0 D Current party breakdown: 2-0 D Most overpopulated district: HI-1 (Honolulu) Most underpopulated district: HI-2 (Half of Oahu/remainder of islands in state) Who controls redistricting: Commission 2012 control: Commission One could make a case that Hawaii is trending Republican: Barack Obama won the state of his birth by 45 points in 2008, and Joe Biden won it by just 29 in 2020. But it would not be a very good case, particularly because if you started in 2004, when George W. Bush came within nine points of carrying the Aloha State, you could argue the opposite. Only two Republicans have ever won House elections in Hawaii: Pat Saiki won two terms in the late 1980s, and Charles Djou won a flukish, all-party special election in 2010, but lost the regular election later that year. The state’s bipartisan redistricting commission will have to make some slight adjustments to account for population (the Honolulu-based 1st District will have to shed a little population to HI-2, which covers the rest of the state), but we otherwise wouldn’t expect much to happen here. Biden won each district by almost identical margins (a shade under 30 points apiece), so they are politically similar. Democrats are so dominant in Hawaii at the state level that Republicans only hold one seat in the 25-member state Senate. NEVADANumber of seats: 4 (no change from 2010s) Party breakdown in 2012: 2-2 split Current party breakdown: 3-1 D Most overpopulated district: NV-3 (Southern Clark County) Most underpopulated district: NV-1 (Las Vegas) Who controls redistricting: Democrats 2012 control: Split Compared to the post-2010 round of redistricting, Democrats have gained control of Nevada, but probably aren’t in a position to add more seats. Ten years ago, with a Democratic legislature and a Republican governor, a panel of three special masters were tasked by a judge to draw the lines. At the time, the state was adding a fourth seat, which most observers expected to lean Democratic, which ended up being the case. In 2011, the court-ordered plan kept a heavily Democratic Las Vegas seat, a GOP-leaning northern seat, and retained a swingy seat in Las Vegas’ southern suburbs. The new seat, NV-4, was added in the northern Las Vegas area, and included a sampling of rural “cow counties.” Though Democrats, as expected, won the new NV-4 in 2012, it became something of a cursed seat. Then-state Sen. Steven Horsford, a Democrat, was elected as its first member. Then, as the red wave of 2014 hit Nevada especially hard, Horsford lost to then-state Assemblyman Cresent Hardy, a Republican. Hardy was defeated himself the next cycle by Democratic state Sen. Ruben Kihuen. Faced with sexual misconduct allegations, Kihuen did not run again in 2018. Horsford made a comeback in 2018, beating Hardy by a 52%-44% margin in a rematch that year. Horsford was reelected in 2020, though by a closer 51%-46% vote — this was the first cycle since its establishment that NV-4 reelected its incumbent. Going into last round’s redistricting cycle, Republicans held NV-3 with then-Rep. Joe Heck (R, NV-3), a first-term member who, on the campaign trail, emphasized his Army service. In 2010, Heck narrowly won his seat by defeating Rep. Dina Titus (D, NV-3), in what was, at the time, the most populous congressional district in the nation. When Heck ran for Senate in 2016, he lost to now-Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV), and was replaced by Democrat Jacky Rosen, a first-time candidate. Rosen successfully made the jump to the Senate in 2018, and Susie Lee (D) — who had lost a primary for NV-4 in 2016 — held NV-3. Lee was reelected in 2020, though by only three percentage points. Shoring up the 3rd District will almost certainly be a priority for Democrats. As it is, NV-3 is among the most closely divided districts in the county: at the presidential level, it supported Barack Obama in 2012, Donald Trump in 2016, and Joe Biden in 2020, but none of its winners cleared 50% of the vote. As Map 2 shows, Democrats could unpack NV-1, which is a reliably blue seat that encompasses downtown Las Vegas. After her loss to Heck, Titus switched districts and made a comeback in NV-1. Titus’ district gets slightly redder, compared to the current map, but Lee and Horsford are each given friendlier seats. Within Clark County, aside from a few larger cities, municipal splits are minimized in Map 2. Much of Las Vegas is in NV-1, NV-4 includes almost all of the more Democratic-leaning North Las Vegas, and NV-3 takes in all of Henderson, the county’s fastest growing, though still GOP-tilting, suburb. Map 2: Hypothetical 3-1 Democratic Nevada mapThough it’s possible to draw four Biden-won seats in Nevada, each district would track closely with the statewide vote — so no single district would be a slam dunk for Democrats. In a red enough cycle, four marginally Democratic seats could all potentially elect Republicans. As veteran state journalist Jon Ralston sums up, though Democrats hold the redistricting pen, pleasing all three of their incumbents may be tricky. While Democrats could certainly come up with something more aggressive than Map 2’s plan, Lee and Horsford seem likely to get, at least, a slight boost. NEW MEXICONumber of seats: 3 (no change from 2010s) Party breakdown in 2012: 2-1 D Current party breakdown: 2-1 D Most overpopulated district: NM-2 (South) Most underpopulated district: NM-1 (Albuquerque) Who controls redistricting: Democrats 2012 control: Split In New Mexico, which has had three seats since the 1980 census, Democrats face a choice: They can continue with two solidly blue seats, or they can risk trying to flip a third seat. In 2011, with a Republican governor and a Democratic legislature, New Mexico’s congressional map was a compromise plan enacted by the state Supreme Court. In essence, it made minimal changes to the existing plan. NM-1 and NM-3, based in Albuquerque and Santa Fe, respectively, remained Democratic-leaning seats while NM-2, which includes Las Cruces and encompasses much of the Texas border, retained its GOP orientation. Then-Rep. Steve Pearce (R, NM-2) was popular in the 2nd District — he held it for the first decade of the 2000s, then vacated it in 2008 to run for Senate. The 2008 New Mexico Senate race was a brutal one for Republicans. Pearce beat out then-Rep. Heather Wilson (R, NM-1) in a close primary, only to get clobbered by then-Rep. Tom Udall (D, NM-3) in the general election — it was a rare situation where all three of the state’s sitting members sought a single U.S. Senate seat. Democrats gained NM-2, as an open seat, in 2008, but in 2010, Pearce reclaimed the seat. Pearce was reelected easily until 2018, when he launched another statewide run, this time for governor — which meant a replay of 2008 in NM-2. Pearce lost by 14 points to now-Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham (D-NM) while NM-2 flipped to Democrats. Xochitl Torres Small, a former Udall staffer whose husband was elected to the state legislature in 2016, narrowly beat out state Rep. Yvette Herrell for the open seat — two years earlier, NM-2 supported Trump by 10 points. Torres Small took 65% in Las Cruces’ Dona Ana County and kept Herrell’s margins down in the rural counties. In Congress, Torres Small joined the Blue Dog Coalition, and tended to the oil industry, a major employer in the district. Still, Herrell ran for a rematch and got a boost from Trump’s showing in the district. While the then-incumbent president lost support in New Mexico’s other two districts, he improved by two percentage points in NM-2, carrying it by a dozen points — Torres Small ran better than Biden, but still lost by seven points. Democrats could give Herrell a tougher district by redrawing NM-2 to take in the entire eastern half of the state. Though fellow first-term Rep. Teresa Leger Fernandez (D, NM-3) may not like such a plan, as it could move some of her Santa Fe home turf into NM-2, it would give Democrats a good chance to reclaim all three districts. Democrats also could give districts 2 and 3 a greater chunk of Bernalillo County, though that may be met with some local resistance (the county is already split among all three districts, but the vast majority of it is in NM-1). If Democrats wanted to try for a 3-0 map, they may want to ensure their two incumbents have enough of a cushion. Based on our calculations, they could draw two seats that would each be about 57% Biden, while the third would have only given him a small majority. Such a district would probably be winnable in a neutral national environment, but not a red wave year. If Democrats pushed for a plan like this, they’d likely risk some public backlash: earlier this year, Gov. Lujan Grisham signed into a law a bill establishing a citizen’s redistricting commission that had bipartisan support. The redistricting commission’s recommendations will not be binding, so even if it suggests a status quo map, Democratic legislators would be free to pass their own plan, though doing so may look heavy-handed. If New Mexico passes a minimal change plan, as it did last decade, the partisan balance of its delegation will very likely remain unchanged. Though NM-3, which includes a large rural swath of the state, has seen its Democratic advantage erode somewhat in recent cycles, Leger Fernandez made a strong debut last year — she was elected by 17%, running about even with Biden in the district. Similarly, in a recent special election, now-Rep. Melanie Stansbury (D, NM-1) won by a surprisingly wide 25-point margin. With Torres Small up for a job in the Biden Administration, it seems unlikely she’d run for a rematch in a similar version of NM-2, so Democrats would need to find another credible candidate to run against Herrell. OREGONNumber of seats: 6 (+1 from 2010s) Party breakdown in 2012: 4-1 D Current party breakdown: 4-1 D Most overpopulated district: OR-1 (Western Portland suburbs) Most underpopulated district: OR-4 (Eugene/Southwest) Who controls redistricting: Democrats 2012 control: Split Of the five states that touch the Pacific Ocean, Oregon is the only one left that lacks a redistricting commission. For 2012, a Democratic governor and a split legislature agreed on a minimal change plan — their job was, perhaps, made easier by the fact that the state was retaining its same five seats. But this year, the Beaver State, for the first time since the 1980 census, will be adding a new district. Though Democrats nominally have a governmental trifecta, with the governorship and clear majorities in the legislature, Republicans are set to have a seat at the table. In a legislative compromise earlier this year designed to cut down on Republican stalling tactics on other legislative matters, state House Speaker Tina Kotek (D) announced that she would give the Republicans a greater role in redistricting. Assuming the deal holds, there will be an equal number of Democrats and Republicans on the House Redistricting Committee — so Democrats will not be able to pass maps out of the committee along a strictly party-line vote (although the deal applies only to the state House, not the state Senate, where Democrats will continue to hold sway on that chamber’s redistricting committee). Of the state’s current incumbents, Reps. Earl Blumenauer (D, OR-3) and Suzanne Bonamici (D, OR-1) are likely the safest members. Though Blumenauer has a chunk of suburban Clackamas County, the bulk of his district comes from Portland’s Multnomah County. OR-3 typically gives Democrats over 70% of the vote, so he’ll have little to fear in any Multnomah County-based seat. Just to the west, Bonamici hails from Washington County, which includes suburbs like Beaverton and Tigard. Washington County itself has a population of roughly 600,000 — in other words, about 85% the population of the ideal congressional district — and Biden carried it 66%-31% last year. Elsewhere in the state, Democrats will want to protect two of their members in more marginal seats. Reps. Peter DeFazio (D, OR-4) and Kurt Schrader (D, OR-5) have both shown impressive crossover appeal over the years, but both were held to just single-digit victories in 2020. DeFazio, who is the longest-serving member in the state’s current delegation (he was first elected in 1986), has a niche as a populist type of progressive. Both the University of Oregon (Eugene) and Oregon State University (Corvallis) are in DeFazio’s district, and these universities have provided him with a durable base of support, but the rest of the district has a more working class character — as in the Midwest, this demographic has moved more Republican. In 2010, despite the red hue of the year, DeFazio carried Coos County, a blue collar county that hugs the coast — 10 years later, he lost it by 17 points. For Democrats, a simple solution to shoring up DeFazio may be to add Deschutes County to his district. This county, which contains Bend, is currently the most populous county in OR-2, the state’s sole GOP-held seat. Deschutes, with its relatively high concentration of college graduates, was a Trump-to-Biden county and seems increasingly dissimilar to the rest of OR-2, which is essentially the rural part of the state east of the Cascades. Though first-term Rep. Cliff Bentz (R, OR-2) carried Deschutes County by 51%-46% last year, given the trend of the area, he may prefer to take in the reddening parts of the current OR-4. Overall, the biggest question about Oregon redistricting seems to be what will happen in the part of the state south of Portland but north of Eugene. Schrader, a Blue Dog who has pulled out clear wins even in some turbulent cycles for his party, is from Clackamas County, which includes suburban communities south of Portland. The mappers could give him all of that county, which supported Biden by 11 points last year, and some blue parts of adjacent counties, for a fairly secure seat. But would there be enough Democratic voters left over to ensure that the new seat votes blue? Perhaps a compromise plan that could get some Republican support would be one that protects the current incumbents while adding a new swing seat — although with a seat at the table in redistricting, Republicans will likely push for a 4-2 Democratic map, giving them the state’s new seat. That outcome is our working assumption right now, but we all know what can happen to those who make assumptions, particularly about redistricting. WASHINGTONNumber of seats: 10 (no change from 2010s) Party breakdown in 2012: 6-4 D Current party breakdown: 7-3 D Most overpopulated district: WA-7 (Seattle) Most underpopulated district: WA-6 (Olympic Peninsula) Who controls redistricting: Commission 2012 control: Commission In Washington state, redistricting has been the prerogative of a bipartisan commission since the 1980s. In 2011, with the state gaining a seat, members of the commission ended up striking a deal: while the new seat would be a blue-leaning district in the Olympia area, WA-1, which was being vacated by now-Gov. Jay Inslee (D-WA), would become slightly more amenable to Republicans. The new WA-10, as expected, elected a Democrat, but the party also retained its hold on WA-1 — now-Rep. Suzan DelBene claimed the redrawn seat 54%-46%, and has only won by larger margins since. Both 2014 and 2016 were fairly sleepy election cycles in the Evergreen State, as no districts traded hands. But 2018 was more eventful. Rep. Dave Reichert (R, WA-8), a popular Republican who held a swing district in the Seattle suburbs, announced his retirement. Republicans ran a credible candidate in Dino Rossi — between 2004, 2008, and 2010, he came out on the losing end of three close statewide races, and was well-known — but the seat flipped to now-Rep. Kim Schrier (D), a physician who was then a first-time candidate. Schrier won by almost five points in 2018, though her margin was slightly reduced in 2020. Though much of WA-8’s vote comes from the Seattle area, specifically King and Pierce counties, some rural counties — Chelan, Kittitas, as well as a small part of Douglas — were added to the seat for 2012, presumably to help Reichert. The three rural counties are all located in the Cascade Mountains, and don’t have especially much in common with the urban parts of WA-8. If the commission prioritizes incumbent protection, WA-8 may lose its eastern counties, though this would mean the district would lose its iconic Scottish Terrier Shape. In 2018, Democrats made serious attempts at districts 3 and 5, but it’s likely that both seats will remain Republican-leaning. WA-3 has been based in southwestern Washington for the past several decades — once home to a vibrant timber industry, Democratic fortunes in the area have waned as the rural pockets of the district have fallen on harder times. In 2010, now-Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler (R) won the district over now-Lt. Gov. Denny Heck (D-WA) — even though 2010 was a rough year for Democrats nationally, Herrera Beutler was the sole Republican to flip a seat in a West Coast state. About 80% of the current WA-3 comes from Clark County (Vancouver) and a few peripheral counties — Clark County has a slight Democratic lean, but the surrounding areas have moved increasingly to the GOP — so it seems mappers wouldn’t have too much room to radically alter a Vancouver-centric seat. In eastern Washington, the 5th District has sent Republican Cathy McMorris Rodgers to Congress since 2004 — from 2013 to 2019, she was Chair of the House Republican Conference, and remains an influential player in the caucus. In 1994, WA-5 was the site of one of the greatest recent congressional upsets, as Democratic Speaker Tom Foley lost his seat in that Republican wave year. Tellingly, the district has changed little since Foley left office — Democrats have a base in Whitman County (which houses Washington State University) and can sometimes carry Spokane County (the largest county in the district), but the rural counties usually give Republicans large majorities. McMorris Rodgers won by nearly 10% against a credible opponent in 2018, and her race completely fell off the radar in 2020. WA-7 which takes up much of Seattle proper and is held by Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D), needs to shed nearly 60,000 residents. As WA-7 usually gives Democrats over 80% of the vote, this could essentially amount to an “unpacking,” as the districts around it could get bluer. So overall, we don’t expect Washington state’s delegation to look much different in 2022 — only one seat changed hands over the last decade. If a similar plan is adopted, the next 10 years could be just as static. Democrats seem likely to be clear favorites in six districts, while their hold on WA-8 may be somewhat tenuous, depending on if it retains its eastern counties. Rep. Herrera Beutler, who voted for Trump’s impeachment, faces several more conservative challengers in her all-party primary, but we’d probably start any Republican there off as a favorite against a Democrat. ConclusionIt feels like redistricting may reinforce the status quo in many of these states. That has been common in Washington. Democrats in Nevada may use their gerrymandering power to shore up the two competitive seats they hold, and they may be constrained from trying to draw a 3-0 map in New Mexico. The Arizona and California commissions are wild cards. The Republicans getting a seat at the table in Oregon may increase the likelihood that they can grab the state’s new seat. So even in a region where Democrats dominate overall, the Republican position there may slightly improve in 2022, either through redistricting and/or the actual campaign next year. Read the fine printLearn more about the Crystal Ball and find out how to contact us here. Sign up to receive Crystal Ball e-mails like this one delivered straight to your inbox. Use caution with Sabato’s Crystal Ball, and remember: “He who lives by the Crystal Ball ends up eating ground glass!” |
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38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Biden Gets Confused Again and Says a Lot of Gibberish About Rising Prices
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
August 12, 2021 THE LATEST The tell-tale signs that the DOJ is criminally investigating Trump by Glenn Kirschner The last week has provided a string of revelations about the extent of former President Donald Trump’s attempts to steal the 2020 election. That includes former acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen providing hours of testimony to the Senate about Trump’s pressure campaign to get the Justice Department to declare rampant voter fraud. There’s no reason given all that we know now that the DOJ shouldn’t be in the process of investigating Trump’s criminal liability in his failed coup attempt, Glenn Kirschner writes.
“As a former career federal prosecutor, I sleep well at night, secure in the bedrock belief that my friends and former colleagues at the Justice Department are, indeed, criminally investigating these matters,” Kirschner writes.
Read Glenn Kirschner’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Thursday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Fox News is literally making America more vaccine-hesitant. Now we have proof. Read More The Senate clash over crypto is only beginning. Read More There’s no reason to think conditions will improve. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE ON MSNBC Watch Ari Melber’s conversation with rapper Lil Baby, where they discuss his music, visit to the White House, views on policing and more. Watch The Beat with Ari Melber, tonight at 6 p.m. ET. Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder joins Rachel Maddow live, tonight at 9 p.m. Follow MSNBC
Check out the MSNBC channel on Apple News
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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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 THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Another big day of Covid-19 news, with restrictions back in several parts of the nation and a brewing battle between parents, schools and politicians over whether or not students should wear masks.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Thursday morning. Any of this sound familiar?
In Hawaii, indoor social gatherings are capped at 10 people; in New Orleans, drive-thru Covid-19 testing sites are back and in Florida, a record number of people are currently hospitalized with the coronavirus.
As the hypertransmissible delta variant spreads across the country, driving new daily Covid-19 cases to a six-month high, many parts of the country are experiencing scenes reminiscent of the early days of the pandemic — something experts say could have been avoided.
“This entire surge was completely preventable,” said Tener Goodwin Veenema, a professor and visiting scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, adding that had more people chosen to get vaccinated as soon as they were eligible, it would have slowed down the spread of the virus.
“We definitely have taken a huge step backward,” she added. “If anything, this fourth surge just provides more compelling evidence to universally implement the public health measures that we know will stop the spread of the pandemic.”
Read the full story here.
Also in pandemic news today:
With the Taliban steamrolling across Afghanistan, U.S. defense officials are concerned that a Taliban takeover of the country will allow Al Qaeda to rebuild and consolidate, creating security concerns well outside Afghan borders.
Nearly 20 years after it planned the Sept. 11 attacks from Afghanistan, Al Qaeda has a diminished presence in the country, which senior U.S. officials estimate at only 200 to 300 members.
“They’re really not a very large or what we would consider a capable contingent,” one of the officials said.
But the security vacuum left by the withdrawal of U.S. military forces could create an opening for Al Qaeda and other terrorist groups to reorganize, the officials say.
Read the full story here. Thursday’s Top Stories
The stakes are higher than ever, experts and voting rights advocates say, with fewer safeguards for voters of color. Nationwide, prison suicides have been increasing for years, and some experts worry worsening conditions and staff shortages brought on by the pandemic may accelerate that rise A temperature of almost 120 degrees Fahrenheit was reported in Sicily on Wednesday and, if verified, would be a record for the continent as a heatwave contributes to deadly wildfires. OPINION We must invest in new therapies for those who get sick even as the vaccine drives continues, writes Dr. Kevin Tracey, president and CEO of the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research. Also in the News
Shopping
Korean beauty has been increasingly popular in the U.S. through the last decade — here’s how experts recommend you get started with it. One Fun Thing
Pamela McGee and JaVale McGee — the first mother-son duo to win gold medals in Olympics history — know what it means to come full circle.
“Now my running gag is that I’m the only Olympian basketball player to birth an Olympian!” Pamela told the “TODAY” show Wednesday.
Pamela, a two-time basketball hall-of-famer, was a member of the 1984 squad that defeated South Korea 85-55. Thirty-seven years later, JaVale, 33, secured a gold medal at the Tokyo Games, when the United States beat France 87-82 on Saturday.
And she has some advice for parents: “What I instilled in both of my children is to max out your capacity. Never be a child that says, ‘coulda, woulda, shoulda,'”
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: patrick.smith@nbcuni.com.
Thanks, Patrick Smith Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Independent commissions add another wildcard to redistricting fight
Today, the U.S. Census Bureau will release the official data that states will use to begin their decennial redistricting process.
And it all kicks off a partisan brawl over how these districts are drawn — especially as Republicans count on a strong showing in state legislative races last year to help them win control of the House in 2022.
But as Republicans have worked toward maximizing congressional gains in states where they have political control, some Democrats and Democratic-leaning states have pushed for recent years to take redistricting out of politicians’ hands — and give it instead to commissions or neutral actors.
That raises the question: Are Democrats are going into this redistricting fight with one hand tied beyond their back? Take Democratic-controlled Colorado and its new commission, which produced a preliminary map that could result in a 5-3 Dem majority or 4-4 tie, instead of 6-2 Dem majority or better if there wasn’t a commission in a state President Biden won by 13 percentage points.
“Politics is about power. That’s what it’s about. You use it to your benefit,” one disappointed Democratic strategist told the Colorado Sun. “If you’ve got the fastball and it’s going at 105, why do you start throwing a breaking ball?”
Photo by Lev Radin/Sipa USA
Indeed, political analyst Kyle Kondik writes that if commissions didn’t exist — especially in Colorado, California and Virginia — Democrats would control of the drawing of more congressional districts where they have full political power.
But the National Democratic Redistricting Committee’s numbers suggest Democrats are at least in a better position than they were heading into the 2011 redistricting because more states handle redistricting through independent commissions or have laws or customs that check full-party control.
NDRC Data
After 2011 Redistricting
Independent Commission and Reform States: 88 districts
Republicans: 213
Democrats: 44
Mixed: 83
Single-Member Districts (no redistricting): 7
During 2021 Redistricting
Independent Commission and Reform States: 173
Republicans: 164
Democrats: 46
Mixed: 46
Single-Member Districts: 6
“We believe that if the maps are fair, Democrats will do just fine,” Kelly Ward Burton, the NDRC’s executive director, told NBC News.
Yet Republicans watching the redistricting fight say that in states where Democrats have full political control — like in Illinois — Democrats will try to maximize their gains. And they also argue that the unelected bureaucrats staffing many of these commissions will hardly be friendly to the GOP.
That brings up another component to these independent redistricting commissions: Many of them are created differently, with different rules and personnel makeups.
The Cook Political Report’s Dave Wasserman says, for example, that Democratic strategists are concerned about how Republicans might have advantages with the commissions in Arizona and New Jersey, while Republicans are wary about the commissions in California and Michigan.
Which all means the redistricting process will be important to watch over the weeks and months ahead, particularly as states spring to set up maps for upcoming elections.
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Divide, divide, divide
There’s been one key theme from recent statements former President Trump has blasted out to reporters and allies — stoking division within the Republican Party.
He’s doing it on infrastructure, floating primary challenges against Republican-backers of the bipartisan bill.
He’s doing it in key races like Georgia’s 2022 gubernatorial election, reveling about how sitting GOP Gov. Brian Kemp “was booed off the stage Saturday at a Georgia Republican Party event.”
And he’s doing it on Jan. 6, revealing he spoke to the family of Ashli Babbitt, who was shot and killed by police while trying to climb into an area off of the House Chamber during the attack on the Capitol, while trying to frame her as a martyr and the Jan. 6 rioters as mainstream.
It begs the question, is his goal to divide the GOP, or purify it?
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TWEET OF THE DAY: House Democrats aren’t a single-track mind on the two-track plan
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
16 months: How long after the deadline for Congress to report stock trades that Kentucky GOP Sen. Rand Paul revealed his wife bought the stock of a pharmaceutical company that makes a Covid-19 treatment.
10: The number of provincial Afghan capitals the Taliban has seized.
36,314,608: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 157,192 more than yesterday.)
622,365: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 492 more than yesterday.)
353,205,544: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 654,600 since yesterday.)
50.3 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
61.3 percent: The share of all American adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
A potential al Qaeda resurgence in Afghanistan worries U.S. officials.
Moderate and progressive House Democrats are continuing to tangle over the two-track infrastructure plan.
And Politico spoke to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer about how he’s, so far, kept his house in order.
The Food and Drug administration is poised to allow immunocompromised people to receive a third dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, while the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended that pregnant women get the vaccines.
A federal judge granted House Democrats only limited access to former President Trump’s financial records.
The New York Times reports that a former U.S. attorney in Atlanta who resigned in January did so because he was warned he would be fire by then-President Trump for not endorsing his baseless claims of election fraud.
And the Washington Post obtained a transcript from the FBI’s 2018 interview with Rudy Giuliani about comments he made during the 2016 election.
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50.) CBS
51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Loudoun County, Virginia. For reasons known only to Marxist nincompoops, Loudoun County was selected for the pilot program of school indoctrination. That’s at least how it seems. Every time there is a … MORE
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
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57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
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58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
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61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Thursday, Aug. 12, and we’re covering Alex Trebek’s successors, stifling heat in the Pacific Northwest, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOW‘Jeopardy!’ Hosts AnnouncedThe job of replacing legendary “Jeopardy!” host Alex Trebek will be taken on by a pair of newcomers—the show’s executive producer Mike Richards and actress Mayim Bialik. Richards will become the regular host, while Bialik will host prime-time specials and spin-off series, including the upcoming “Jeopardy! National College Championship.” The pair take over for Trebek, who led the show for almost four decades before passing away in November from pancreatic cancer. During his tenure, the show won 30 Daytime Emmys—the most-ever for a game show—with Trebek nabbing eight for best host, along with a lifetime achievement award. The show also garnered a prestigious Peabody Award in 2011. For her part, Bialik (pronounced “bee-AH-lick”), who has a PhD in neuroscience, played the main character in the ’90s show “Blossom” and was nominated for four Primetime Emmys for her role as Dr. Amy Farrah Fowler on “The Big Bang Theory.” See her announcement here. Northwest Heat Returns The Pacific Northwest is bracing for another round of heat, with yesterday kicking off at least three days of triple-digit temperatures in many areas of the region. Both Seattle and Portland, Oregon, are expected to see temperatures today nearly 20 to 25 degrees above average highs. The hot spell follows a June-July heat wave that broke records in many areas of the region, including Canada (121 degrees), Salem, Oregon (117 degrees), and Spokane, Washington (109 degrees). Amid the heat, the region has grappled with two large-scale wildfires. Oregon’s Bootleg Fire, now 98% contained, burned more than 410,000 acres in the state’s Fremont-Winema National Forest, while California’s Dixie Fire has consumed more than 500,000 acres (30% containment). New satellite images revealed the destruction of Greenville, California, which was overrun by the fire last week. Separately, hundreds were evacuated in southeastern Montana as the Richard Springs Fire, which has burned 150,000 acres, threatened a number of towns. Across the Atlantic, Europe is preparing for its own heat wave—Italy is believed to have set an all-time high for the continent, with parts of Sicily reaching almost 120 degrees Fahrenheit yesterday. Masks and MandatesCalifornia yesterday became the first state to require all school teachers and staff in the state to be vaccinated against COVID-19 or undergo regular testing. Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) framed the mandate as part of the effort to ensure schools fully reopen in the fall. He declined to say whether the state, which educates more than 6 million K-12 pupils in public schools, would require vaccines for students. In Texas, a Dallas County judge overruled an order by Gov. Greg Abbott (R), stating that face masks will be required in schools and businesses within the county. The US is averaging roughly 117,000 new cases per day (see data). Average deaths have passed 550 per day, roughly double from three weeks ago. The majority of recent cases, hospitalizations, and deaths as a function of population have been recorded in Deep South states, though California still ranks third in terms of absolute totals. See a breakdown by county (paywall, NYT). Take a look inside a Louisiana hospital dealing with a surge in cases here. In partnership with SailthruFOOD52, FABLETICS, THRIVE MARKETTrivia time: What do Food52, Fabletics, and Thrive Market have in common? You guessed it—they all use Sailthru to create meaningful connections with their customers. And they all ranked among top brands on this year’s Retail Personalization Index. And to earn the trust of big brands like those, you have to go above and beyond. Sailthru evaluated the top brands thriving in the next era of commerce and published the fourth annual Retail Personalization Index, outlining email strategies, tips, and trends from top brands in the industry that your business can use to grow revenue. A strong email strategy is more important now than ever, and Sailthru can help you implement some of the highest-impact optimizations available. Explore the research and best email practices from the Retail Personalization Index in Sailthru’s Email Guide. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & Culture> Los Angeles to require proof of vaccination for indoor spaces including restaurants, movie theaters, and concert venues (More) > Dolly Parton to release her first novel, “Run, Rose, Run,” in March 2022; book will be cowritten by James Patterson (More) > Baylor University avoids heavy punishment in sexual assault scandal, receives four-year probation and fines (More) | Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Corbin Burnes ties all-time MLB record by striking out 10 consecutive batters (More) Science & Technology> Aubrey de Grey, renowned aging and longevity scientist and founder of the SENS Research Foundation, placed on leave after two prominent female colleagues accuse him of sexual harassment (More) > Tentacle-covered molecules are capable of moving through the body while evading the immune system; known as dendrimers, the lab-made particles may allow delivery of sensitive drugs without causing an inflammatory reaction (More) > Cooling oxygen-deprived newborns—a common method to attempt to prevent brain damage—linked to higher mortality rates in low- and middle-income countries, according to new study (More) Business & MarketsBrought to you by The Ascent > US stock markets mixed (S&P 500 +0.3%, Dow +0.6%, Nasdaq -0.2%); Dow closes at fresh record high as inflation increases, but not as much as feared by investors (More) > Cybersecurity giant NortonLifeLock to acquire British rival Avast via merger in $8.1B deal (More) > Weight Watchers shares fall 25%; company sees lower subscriber count as customer base takes a break from health goals in favor of enjoying the summer (More) From our partners: 0% intro APR now into 2023. This card can save you up to $1,863 in interest charges on $10,000 of debt. Thanks to one of the longest 0% APR periods on the market, you won’t be paying credit card interest until 2023. Apply now in just two minutes. Politics & World Affairs> Release of census data expected today; detailed numbers will kick off redrawing of House districts at the state level (More) > Russia brings new charges against opposition leader Alexei Navalny, alleging he incited violence and led unauthorized protests; Navalny has been in jail since January, serving a three-and-a-half-year sentence (More) > British embassy worker arrested on charges of spying for Russia; known as David S., the suspect was arrested in Germany after allegedly selling sensitive documents to Russian intelligence (More) IN-DEPTHSaving HistoryNYT | Annalisa Quinn. In the days before the fall of the Berlin Wall, East German police worked furiously to shred records detailing surveillance of its own citizens. Researchers have spent years painstakingly recreating the documents in an effort to preserve the history of Stasi operations. (Read, paywall) ‘I Found Your Mom’ESPN | Adam Rittenberg, Kyle Bonagura. Four decades after her murder, college football coach Paul Wulff was finally able to piece together the details of his mother’s fate. (Read) THE BIGGEST TRENDS IN EMAILIn partnership with Sailthru We know data are important to you when making decisions, so here are some highlights from this year’s Retail Personalization Index, powered by Sailthru: For more email best practices like this and more to help your business better define email strategy and grow revenue, sign up to read Sailthru’s 6 Best Practices for Standing Out in the Inbox today. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAAfter 800-mile trip, China’s wandering elephants are headed home. Stressed? Release your thoughts with this public meditative diary. News media’s Great Paywall Shift. NASA’s Mars copter spots the Perseverance rover from above. Bitcoin baron “buys” a Danish octopus. Italy’s Mount Etna is growing. Man hooks a great white from the beach. Strong winds force a Hawaii waterfall to flow upward. Clickbait: Handcuffed man flees from police on an ATV. Historybook: Egyptian queen Cleopatra dies by suicide (30 BCE, estimated); RIP James Bond creator Ian Fleming (1964); IBM personal computer is released (1981); Largest ever Tyrannosaurus rex discovered (1990); RIP Hollywood icon Lauren Bacall (2014) “Imagination is the highest kite one can fly.” – Lauren Bacall 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. 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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
TODAY’S MORNING JOLT WITH JIM GERAGHTY |
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65.) POLITICAL WIRE
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67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Together with: Welcome to the Thursday edition of Internet Insider, where we explore identities online and off. Today:
BREAK THE INTERNET Popular TikToker Aunt Karen receives death threats after exposing allegedly racist CEO In a recent tweet, Denise Bradley, also known as TikToker Aunt Karen, said that the husband of Eileen Cure, the top-level finance executive that Bradley accused of racist hiring practices last month, threatened Bradley’s life.
Bradley, who’s known for her “Racist of the Day” TikTok videos, tweeted on Thursday that a Houston reporter confirmed Cure’s husband said, “Tell that TikToker to come down here to Texas, and I’ll put her in a grave.”
“At this point I am concerned for my safety, and will be taking necessary steps to protect myself,” Bradley wrote. Bradley identified the reporter mentioned in her tweet as Click2Houston’s Taisha Walker to the Daily Dot. In her TikTok that initially exposed Cure, Bradley referenced a Skype message that Cure allegedly sent to an employee about hiring practices at her financial planning company.
“I said no blacks,” the message says. “Please don’t second guess me or go against what I ask. Listen to me and give me what I ask for please.” Cure also implied that she wasn’t prejudiced herself but that her clients were. Cure was later fired from her position at LPL Financial. Bradley has posted many follow-up videos about her continuing interactions with Cure—who Bradley says is suing her—and new information on the situation on her TikTok. But the tone of the videos took a turn after Bradley was put into danger herself. In a TikTok posted on Aug. 6, the day after she tweeted about the death threat), Bradley confirmed that she was safe. She also said that because of her concerns for her personal safety, she left her home and was staying in a hotel.
“I have to take all threats seriously,” Bradley told the Daily Dot, who said because her address has been published online, she was “forced to move.” “It’s clear her husband blames me for his wife’s business failing when it clearly was her own doing,” said Bradley, adding that she has not spoken directly to Eileen Cure. In her TikTok video uploaded Monday, Bradley filmed herself at a gun range. She told the Daily Dot that she is increasing the security in her home and has completed a concealed carry class. “I will not be scared away from what I believe in,” Bradley said. “Racism has no place in 2021.” Contributing Writer
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FROM OUR FRIENDS AT NAUTILUS Will elderly people need to get a COVID vaccine booster? All the vaccines currently authorized for emergency use have been proven to offer protection against COVID-19 for at least six months, according to pharmaceutical studies. As that protection eventually diminishes, however, public health experts believe that booster shots may be necessary. It stands to reason that the most vulnerable, including elderly people and the immunocompromised, will be first in line for COVID vaccine booster shots. Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, confirmed the likelihood of booster shots on NBC’s Meet the Press on Aug. 8. “If you’re a person who has an immune compromise, transplant, cancer chemotherapy, immunosuppressive therapy, you likely never got a good response to begin with,” Fauci said. “So, it isn’t that the durability of the response went down. For those individuals, I am strongly in favor of getting them that additional shot as soon as possible. “Sooner or later, you’re going to see an attenuation to the point where we’re going to have to give an additional boost to people, very likely the elderly, before you give it to otherwise normal people who are not old,” Fauci added. “That’s going to happen as soon as the data gets to us.” Fauci explained that, for example, the Pfizer vaccine starts at about 90% efficacy but decreases to around 84% after a few months. Data for Moderna does not yet indicate a decline, but Fauci expects that it eventually will echo Pfizer’s data, which indicates that the efficacy of the Pfizer shot declines about 6% every two months. Both Pfizer and Moderna are currently studying the effectiveness of booster shots, including variations specifically designed to combat different strains. Pfizer is expected to request authorization for a booster of its two-dose vaccine in August. Moderna recently stated that booster shots will likely become necessary by the fall.
SELF-CARE End-of-summer reading list For better or for worse, summer is winding down. There’s uncertainty about how fall will look—whether masks will be required in schools, for example—and what looms at the other end of what was billed as a summer of freedom.
What’s sure to remain in the coming months, however, is a stack of books on my nightstand. Right now, my stack includes Portrait of a Mirror by A. Natasha Joukovsky, a novel that mocks the bourgeoisie while evoking high art, and The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk, an increasingly popular modern study on trauma. Below, I’m sharing three more books that belong on your end-of-summer reading list if they aren’t already:
Now Playing: 🎶 “Made in Love” – Samantha Urbani 🎶
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Thursday 08.12.21 Federal wildland firefighters could see big benefits from the bipartisan infrastructure package, including higher pay and more permanent options for seasonal positions. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. These two maps show the rapid acceleration of Covid-19 cases in the US over a month. Coronavirus
More than 98% of US residents now live in an area with a “high” or “substantial” risk of Covid-19 community transmission — a CDC metric that involves case numbers and test positivity rates. A mere month ago, that figure was at only 19%. In some areas, like Cobb County in Georgia, some schools have already had to switch to virtual learning to keep kids safe from rising infections. Experts are hoping to get children vaccinated soon and re-up protection for vulnerable populations, which could turn these worrying trends around. The FDA is expected to announce within days that it is authorizing Covid-19 vaccine booster shots for some people who are immunocompromised. Meanwhile, US intelligence officials tasked with investigating the origins of Covid-19 are nearing the end of their 90-day assignment and have drafted a classified report now under preliminary review.
Congress
As Congress enters the August recess, Democratic organizations are hoping to keep the energy up following the recent flurry of activity around some of President Biden’s top agenda items. Pro-Biden groups plan to spend millions of dollars in ad buys and other campaign opportunities to tout the multitrillion-dollar infrastructure bill and budget resolution that just passed through the Senate. This is the first prolonged congressional recess since Biden took office in January, and moments like this are key to growing and maintaining public support. Dems are also hoping to project an air of bipartisan cooperation as the all-important 2022 midterm elections approach.
Ransomware
Another major company has been hit by a ransomware attack. Accenture, a global consulting firm, was targeted by a ransomware gang that claims it will publish the company’s encrypted files on the dark web unless it pays up. Other international targets, like a UK rail network and an Indian news organization, have been hit in the past by the same malicious software. The US government has identified ransomware attacks as a critical national and economic security threat amid a string of attacks against corporate and infrastructure targets. In a separate cybercrime, hackers stole about $600 million in cryptocurrency from the decentralized finance platform Poly Network. Some of that money has been returned, but in all, it could be the largest crypto theft in that industry’s history.
Economy
Things are getting even more expensive across the US as the economy tries to keep pace against the pandemic. Consumer prices rose 4.3% in the year ending in July, and that’s not including the volatile food and energy categories. Food prices are up 3.4% over last year, and meat products have seen a big rise. Gas prices also recently hit seven-year highs. The average price of a gallon was $3.19 as of yesterday morning, AAA said — a full dollar more than the same time last year. The Biden administration is calling on the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies like Russia (together, known as OPEC+) to do more to combat these rising energy prices. The administration is also trying to curtail any illegal activity that may lead to differences in oil prices and prices at the pump.
Afghanistan
US intelligence assessments paint a dire picture of Afghanistan’s immediate future, predicting that the country’s capital of Kabul could be cut off by the Taliban in the next 90 days. While there are multiple assessments out there with different conclusions, such a collapse would be a stunning and swift defeat following the two-decade US military campaign in the country. It could also lead to a full collapse of the Afghan government. The Taliban has overrun 10 provincial capitals since Friday, and its rapid gains have led officials to consider more urgent measures, like possibly drawing down more US Embassy personnel. Biden, however, has said his plans for the withdrawal as a whole have not changed.
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People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. See the full list of MTV VMAs 2021 nominations
‘Jeopardy!’ will replace Alex Trebek with not 1 but 2 hosts
NASA has more info about the hazardous asteroid Bennu’s Earth approach
Wendy’s is spending more to keep customers coming back for its already-popular breakfast menu
These foods disappeared from grocery stores last year. Now they’re back 337 That’s the number of migrant children separated at the US-Mexico border under the Trump administration whose parents have still not been located. The Biden administration is working to contact these parents as part of a family reunification task force. I’m going to stand right here at the end of my term, whenever it ends, no one will ever describe my administration as a toxic work environment.
New York Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul, who is poised to take over for Gov. Andrew Cuomo soon after he announced his resignation this week amid an ongoing sexual harassment scandal.
Brought to you by Vault by CNN In the Vault this week: A new era of space flight begins with the launch of space shuttle Columbia. Today, August 12, at 1PM ET / 5PM GMT, CNN’s archive will open once again for digital collectors to to own a pivotal piece of history in the form of an NFT. Learn more. How the most expensive nannies in the world train for the job 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- This day in baseball history: The Vida Blue-Sonny Siebert rematch
- Senate advances reconciliation “blueprint” but Manchin balks at price tag
- Bidenomics: A “That 70s Show” Rerun
- Midweek in Pictures: Special Cuomo Schadenfraude Edition
- Gavin Newsom Goes Captain Queeg
This day in baseball history: The Vida Blue-Sonny Siebert rematch
Posted: 11 Aug 2021 04:42 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)In late May 1971, Sonny Siebert and the Boston Red Sox defeated Vida Blue and the Oakland A’s at Fenway Park. John and I attended the game. Blue’s loss was his first in almost two months. It took his record for the season to 10-2 and Siebert’s to 9-0. Siebert and Blue faced each other again on August 11, 1971 at Fenway. Much had changed in the intervening two and a half months. Siebert was now 14-7 with an ERA about a run and one-third-higher than when he outdueled Blue. The Red Sox, in first place by four games after that game, were now in second, 6.5 games behind the defending world champion Orioles. Blue was still going great. His record heading into the rematch with Siebert was 20-4. His ERA was 1.56, compared to 1.03 before the late-May game in Boston and 1.31 immediately thereafter. The Oakland A’s were also thriving. After the late-May loss to the Red Sox, they were in first place, six games ahead of the Minnesota Twins. Heading into the Blue-Siebert rematch, they led the division by 13.5 games over second-place Kansas City. The May 28 game was “standing room” only, the result of overselling tickets. John and I were among those without seats. Attendance that night was 35,714. Attendance on August 11 was 30,781. Full capacity that year was 33,379. Rain delayed the August 11 game by nearly two hours. When the contest finally began, the A’s jumped on Siebert, scoring two runs in the first inning on a two-out home run by Blue’s good friend and confidante Tommy Davis. The A’s scored again in the third inning to take a 3-0 lead. With two out, Davis singled home Blue, who had bunted his way on base and had advanced to scoring position on a single by Reggie Jackson. Siebert settled down after that, but Blue preserved the 3-0 lead through seven innings. He looked to be heading for his ninth shutout of the season. In the bottom of the eighth, however, Blue walked pinch-hitter Phil Gagliano (batting for Siebert) and then allowed a home run to Doug Griffin. Griffin hit only seven home runs in more than 2,000 at-bats during his career. Blue still held a one-run lead heading into the bottom of the ninth. But with one out, Rico Petrocelli tied the game with a home run. Petrocelli had rocked Blue with two homers in the late-May game. His blast in the rematch sent the game into extra innings. Blue was scheduled to lead off the top of the tenth, and Oakland’s manager Dick Williams decided to let him hit. Blue grounded out, but Bert Campanaris followed with a single and Joe Rudi with a walk. That brought Jackson to the plate against Boston reliever Roger Moret, a tough left-hander. Reggie didn’t hit lefties all that well (in 1971, he batted only .225 against them), but he seldom got cheated on his swings against them. On this occasion, he hit a double that sent Campanaris home and Rudi to third base. One out later, Boston brought in veteran Bob Bolin to face Sal Bando. Bolin unleashed a wild pitch that scored Rudi and gave Oakland a 5-3 lead. Blue, who probably should have been replaced by a pinch hitter in the ninth, gave up back-to-back singles to Griffin and Aparicio to start the bottom of the tenth. Williams replaced his ace with Darold Knowles, one of the best left-handed relievers in the game, whom Charlie Finley had pried away from the Washington Senators along with Mike Epstein in a great trade for Oakland. The first batter Knowles faced was switch-hitting Reggie Smith, equally dangerous from both sides of the plate. Hitting right-handed, Smith grounded into a double play. Carl Yastrzemski was Boston’s last hope. Knowles struck him out. As we have seen, Blue bounced back nicely from his late-May defeat at Fenway Park. However, his performance dipped after his victorious nine-plus inning outing on August 11. (We don’t know how many pitches he threw that day, but he faced 38 batters and, with nine strike outs and three walks, must have run some long counts.) Blue’s record during the remainder of the season was 3-4. He never got that ninth shutout. It seems clear that Dick Williams overused Blue down the stretch. From a baseball standpoint, there was no need to keep pitching him every fourth day, often for eight or nine innings. Oakland held a more than comfortable lead in the AL West. Williams’ decision was likely dictated by Charlie Finley. The A’s had a great and exciting young team, but struggled to attract fans to the Oakland Coliseum to watch them. Finley was desperate to reach the one million mark in attendance, a modest figure even 50 years ago. Blue was his meal ticket. But despite the star left-hander’s appeal, Oakland would draw only 915,000 fans at home — below the league average. And Blue was ineffective in his one playoff appearance. Still, the hard-throwing 22 year-old southpaw, pitching in his first full big-league season, went 24-8, with a 1.82 ERA. He won the AL Cy Young award and was named the league’s most valuable player.
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Senate advances reconciliation “blueprint” but Manchin balks at price tag
Posted: 11 Aug 2021 10:21 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)By a count of 50-49, the Senate has voted to proceed with formulating a $3.5 trillion budget reconciliation package. Joe Manchin provided the vote that enabled this. Almost immediately thereafter, however, Manchin said he is unlikely to support such a package once it is presented. Manchin explained that he has “serious concerns about the grave consequences facing West Virginians and every American family if Congress decides to spend another $3.5 trillion.” He added:
As far as I can tell, only one of Manchin’s colleagues has any inclination to “consider this reality.” Kyrsten Sinema has said she will not support a final $3.5 trillion package. She and Manchin both framed their vote in favor of advancing a blueprint as a way to begin the process, rather than as an embrace of the intended outcome. I’m struggling to make sense of this. If you aren’t going to support a $3.5 trillion package, why approve a blueprint for developing one? Why not insist on a blueprint for an amount you will end up supporting? Maybe Manchin and Sinema made noises to Republican Senators about trimming the reconciliation package in exchange for their agreement to pass the infrastructure bill, and now feel compelled to make noises about insisting on such a trimming. Maybe in the end they will insist on some minor trimming. To me, however, the whole thing seems like theatre. Greg Sargent, a left-wing Washington Post columnist, explains what he thinks is going on. His analysis is convoluted, but that doesn’t mean it’s wrong. Sargent’s piece contains one statement that’s hard to dispute. He writes:
Which means, as I argued here, that where the rubber meets the road, there is little to distinguish Joe Biden and the Democratic mainstream from the Democratic left.
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Bidenomics: A “That 70s Show” Rerun
Posted: 11 Aug 2021 10:18 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)President Biden has said openly that one of his main objects is to turn back Ronald Reagan’s famous line from his first inaugural address that “Government is the problem.” Of course, everyone omits the qualifying preface of the entire Reagan quote: “In this present crisis, government is not the solution to the problem; government is the problem.” (Emphasis added.) While we can argue about how Reagan’s qualifier “in this present crisis” should be understood, one thing is clear: Biden is doing everything imaginable to recreate the economic crisis that Reagan responded to in 1980 with his package of economic changes that were soon called “Reaganomics.” But as Reagan noted, when things got better in a hurry, the media and his critics stopped calling it “Reaganomics.” Now we have upon us “Bidenomics.” First, let us note that every major economic catastrophe—and many minor ones—of the last 100 years involved policy errors by the Federal Reserve as a primary cause, most famously the Great Depression, the inflation of the 1970s, and the housing crash of 2008. And lots of ordinary business-cycle recessions can be traced to bad Fed policy, too. Keep in mind that when banks are caught trying to manipulate short term interest rates and credit flows, they get hit with a criminal charge. But when the Fed does it, it’s called “quantitative easing” or some other euphemism. Make no mistake: Fed control of short term interest rates, and their massive purchases of credit in the open market, are an attempt at price controls—in this case, the price of money. And like all other kinds of price controls, it creates market distortions that sooner or later have bad effects. Which brings us to current Fed chairman Jerome Powell, who is up for reappointment next year. President Trump appointed Powell because Powell represented a bias toward easy money and low interest rates—music to the ears of a real estate person like Trump. (Most everyone else favored John Taylor for the Fed chair position, which would have been much better.) So far Powell has mostly not disappointed the easy-money constituency. While it is reported that Biden’s economic team is inclined to reappoint Powell to a second term as Fed chair, there is one group inside the Democratic Party who don’t like him, and are pressuring Biden to pick someone else. Guess who they would be?
You can see here that the left thinks the Fed should be in the business of greater financial regulation (never mind all the other existing regulatory agencies with responsibility for financial regulation), climate change, and income redistribution. Great. What could go wrong? The main reason the Progressives want a leftist Fed chair is that they want the Fed to accommodate massive amounts of new spending under the doctrine of “modern monetary theory,” which holds that since you’re borrowing in your own currency you can borrow as much as you want without consequence. Back in the New Deal era, the slogan was, “We owe it to ourselves!” Except in the “That 70s Show” rerun that Biden watches at naptime, the latest inflation reading out today came in at a 5.4 percent annual rate, continuing the acceleration of inflation we’ve seen for several months now. Then there’s energy. One of the economic problems of the 1970s was energy scarcity (entirely due to stupid regulations) and price increases tied in part to OPEC market dominance. The Biden Administration is trying to strangle fossil fuel production here at home, and thus has had to resort to this today:
How about production increases here at home? Also, this part is delicious:
Question: how much is the typical oil company profit from each gallon of gas sold at the pump? I believe it is still around 20 cents (or less). How much do state and federal governments make from each gallon of gas sold at the pump from gasoline taxes? Around 45 cents. (Incidentally, every time the government investigates gasoline price markets, as they have since the 1970s, they find . . . nothing. It’s like markets actually work or something. No one ever seems to remember any of this.) Jimmy Carter was unavailable for comment.
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Midweek in Pictures: Special Cuomo Schadenfraude Edition
Posted: 10 Aug 2021 10:48 PM PDT (Steven Hayward)What’s the Italian word for the German word schaenfreude? I think maybe the word I’m looking for is “Cuomo”? Certainly we’re entitled to some heavy alfredo sauce schadenfreude for Andrew, a first class Weltverderber (“world worsener”) if there ever was one. All day today I’ve been smacking my lips in anticipation of what the New York Post would come up with, and I was not disappointed!
Reminder of how our pathetic media slobbered over King Andrew:
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Gavin Newsom Goes Captain Queeg
Posted: 10 Aug 2021 10:30 PM PDT (Steven Hayward)Gavin Newsom must have gotten some really bad recall election poll numbers today (or he was shaken by Andrew Cuomo’s rapid fall to political disgrace), because he completely lost it in an interview with editorial board members of the McClatchy newspapers. Keep in mind as you take this in that McClatchy is a liberal newspaper chain, and yet Newsom still lashes out at their totally legitimate questions, and has the body language of a certain Navy ship captain obsessed with some missing strawberries. The only thing missing are some large-gauge ball bearings for him to roll around in one hand.
If this clip could be shown to every California voter, he’d lose his recall in a landslide.
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86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
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93.) JUST THE NEWS
Just The News: Daily Newsletter
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94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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96.) NOT THE BEE
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Not the Bee Daily Newsletter |
Aug 12, 2021 |
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Sponsored By: Beverly Hills MD The Top 3 ‘Super Ager’ Habits And The 1 Thing You Can Do At Home To Snap Back Sagging Skin.Looking younger was once thought to be a luxury that only women who had access to plastic surgery and costly professional treatments could enjoy. But now, a game-changing discovery is finally leveling the playing field, as more and more women learn to fight back against their body’s “aging switch.” According to experts, not only is it possible to slow down the appearance of aging — it turns out, women can easily do it themselves. That’s why the latest anti-aging trend isn’t plastic surgery or expensive creams, but a simple daily ritual. Click Here to learn more about these superfoods.
Presenting the Most Satisfying Moonwalk-Like Slide You’ve Ever Seen in Your LifeThe more you watch it, the better it gets:
After killing American pipelines, Biden is now begging OPEC to pump more oil and ship it to us in a bid to control gas prices!We live in clown world, and unfortunately, clown world has crazy gas prices.
Watch: Loudoun County teacher resigns in tears at a board meeting while slamming her district for their evil woke policies that teach hate and divisionTeachers like this are the ones your children need, but you won’t find them pretty soon in our nation’s woke public schools.
Aaand now we’ve got 13-year-olds getting duct-taped to their airplane seatsThis is literally the third time an airline passenger has been duct-taped in the past month.
Tucker calls Biden’s border crisis “the greatest scandal of my lifetime” 👀
NASA is launching a mission to explore an asteroid they think contains $10,000 QUADRILLION worth of precious metalsEnough to make every human on the planet a billionaire.
An Elementary School In Georgia Is Segregating Kids In School Based On Race. Today. In 2021.Soooo, apparently, racism and segregation are back in full force in the deep south. But this time, in Atlanta, it’s the woke who are instituting the racist policy, so it’s totally cool.
Women are tuning out of Chris Cuomo’s CNN show in record numbers and I wonder why that could possibly be 🤔Chris Cuomo is an objective journalist who holds powerful, oppressive leaders to account, even if they’re members of his own family.
Professor of theology: “White people, how does it feel to be a problem?” 🤔It’s insanely ironic that this woman would spend an entire minute talking about how white people see themselves as as the superior lords of all Creation (and that the proof was that Donald Trump was elected in 2016), only to turn around and tell them that they are the problem based entirely on the color of their skin.
Get ready for this enthusiastic person to loudly tell you all about being “abrosexual”I literally can’t go more than five minutes without some TikToker yelling at me about some new version of narcissistic genderfluidity.
Man bites other man’s nipple off during road rage incident in Chicago
Craziest video ever: A hawk swoops down and catches a rabbit. Then a DEER rushes out and rescues the rabbit by stomping the hawk to death. What the actual heck.I don’t even know what to say. That deer has seen some things, man. There’s certainly some trauma in its past. Just a cold-blooded remorseless killer.
ROFL Greta Thunberg is on the cover of VogueThat’s right, Greta is gracing the cover of the Scandinavian version of Vogue. Petting an animal, of course.
THIS IS GETTING INSANE: YouTube has suspended the good doctor Sen. Rand Paul for 7 daysSeriously, it’s one thing for a tech platform to censor a commentator like Allie Stuckey or an academic like James Lindsay (as horrible as that still is), but to censor a sitting senator and medical doctor over a point of disagreement on masks?
These archaeologists claim they’ve found the actual Trojan HorseThis totally sounds like it should be the plot of an Indiana Jones movie.
Simone Biles fails to medal in moral logicI admit I wasn’t overly worked up either way about U.S. Olympic gymnast Simone Biles dropping out of the team competition in Tokyo a couple weeks ago, thereby costing her team the gold medal. I thought it was a little weird to call one of the most decorated gymnastic champions of all time a “quitter,” and I thought it was even weirder to call someone a “champion” or “hero” for dropping out of a high-pressured event.
Tucker Carlson’s monologue about Andrew Cuomo from last night is 🔥
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com |
Republicans Tell Democrats to Go It Alone on Debt Ceiling
Special: Biden Fires Warning Shot for Retirees… Megyn Kelly: Chris Cuomo Has ‘Lost All Credibility,’ CNN Next? Texas Gov. Abbott: Gender Affirmation Surgeries Considered Child Abuse Trump: Many Turning Off Fox News Special: Millions to Be Hit Hard by the U.S. Scheme to Confiscate Your Savings Mike Lindell Promises Revelations Lindell at Symposium Trump Praises Mo. Governor for McCloskey Pardon Trump to Ashli Babbitt’s Family: ‘There Must Be Justice’ Special: Do This or Pledge Your Retirement to the Democrats Southwest, American, Delta Airlines Rejecting Employee Vaccine Mandates South Dakota Gov. Noem: Motorcycle Rally Is Act of Freedom
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99.) MARK LEVIN
August 11, 2021
On Wednesday’s Mark Levin Show, There’s a coup taking place, an un-armed insurrection in the Capitol by the Democrat Party. As Thomas Jefferson said, this is the tyranny of the legislature. Congress doesn’t have the power to attack America’s sovereignty or to open our borders, brainwash our children and promote racism. Everything going on in Washington DC is an extraconstitutional subterfuge. The Democrat Party is an evil political institution that protected slavery and creates the Jim Crow laws all while being shielded by their propagandists in the media. The once-great Republican Party is filled with quislings led by Mitch McConnell and every single baby born will now have a debt of $750,000 as soon as they are born as a result of today’s capitulation on the infrastructure bill. Then, President Biden doesn’t care about America, he is a selfish street-thug politician supported by an unqualified vice president who’s failing miserably at the border, a power-hungry Senate Majority Leader using New York to guide all of America, and a Speaker of the House who’s a San Francisco psycho! Later, transgenderism and critical race theory are not government education, it’s Democrat Party indoctrination. Children are being taught to be American Marxists with disdain for this country and this is how you change and destroy a nation. Afterward, the CDC is misreporting the infection count coming out of Florida, this was subsequently reported by the media as a new record high. of course, the correction of those numbers was never reported.
THIS IS FROM:
Washington Times
Biden admin. calls on OPEC to increase oil production as gas prices rise
Fox Business
Consumer prices rise 5.4% annually in July
Politico
GOP megadonors flock to Tim Scott, building 2024 buzz
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Sarah Silbiger
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) RIGHT & FREE
It’s becoming painfully clear that Nancy Pelosi only cares about one thing: her power. She is quick to ignore the advice and requests of members of the House. She attacks people, then breaks her own rules. And the only thing that seems to motivate her decisions is her own vindictive quest. A former Speaker of the House, Newt Gingrich, weighed in on Pelosi’s legacy. And Newt gave her a new, fitting nickname. It wasn’t even close. The final count was 1,798 against and 738 for, 71% to 29%. The issue in question was whether the employees at an Amazon warehouse in…
We all missed a bullet when Democrats’ “For the People Act” lost support in Congress. Why? Because Democrats wanted to take over the creation of congressional districts from the states. For years, Democrats have tried to stop Republicans from redrawing districts at the state level. They often took state lawmakers to court, so they could have an advantage in “gerrymandering” our states. But the Supreme Court just swung a “wrecking ball” into the left’s plans. Because they just ended a long-standing tactic. |
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
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110.) UNCOVER DC
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