Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday August 23, 2021
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 8.23.21
Good Monday morning.
Summertime often sees a flurry of personnel moves in the world of government and politics. Let’s start the morning with an update about who’s in the Departure Lounge.
— First up in the Lounge is Fred Piccolo, the former Communications Director and spokesperson for Gov. Ron DeSantis and former Speaker José Oliva. Piccolo has left his position as Executive Vice Chancellor for the Florida Department of Education’s college system and is now the Communications Director at the Florida Justice Association.
— As first reported by POLITICO Florida, Mr. Meerkat, Matthew Mears, is leaving his position as the Department of Education’s general counsel to run the state’s Division of Early Learning.
— Another high-profile flyer in the Departure Lounge is Paige Davis. Previously a Deputy Chief of Staff to Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis, Davis, who was the campaign manager of Patronis’ first race, is transitioning to the Republican’s reelection campaign, where she will be an in-house fundraiser. Davis is also moving to Jacksonville to be closer to her husband, Nick Primrose.
— Emily Duda Buckley, a truly generous and kind person who spent the last two years as Director Legislative Affairs at the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, is now a lobbyist at the Dean Mead lobbying firm, where she will rejoin former colleagues, Marc Dunbar and Chris Moya. Meanwhile, Carlos Nathan, who had served as Buckley’s deputy, has been promoted to Director.
— Smart guy Chris Emmanuel, who had been the Florida Chamber of Commerce’s primary advocate for transportation, utilities, energy, and property rights issues, is now in Chris Spencer‘s shop — the Office of Policy and Budget — DeSantis’ office. Also new to OPB are Melissa Smith and Michael Wilson, who moved over from the Florida House.
— BillieAnne Gay, a fierce competitor in our TallyMadness tournaments, is exiting her position as Director of Legislative & Advocacy Services at the Florida School Boards Association. “BillieAnne has been instrumental in leading our advocacy services for the past several years and will be greatly missed,” said Andrew Messina, the Executive Director of the Florida School Boards Association. We already know what Gay’s next move is, but it deserves a full write-up, so check back on that later this week.
___
First in Sunburn — Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried today is announcing two promotions and a new hire in the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services’ communications office.
Franco Ripple, who served as FDACS communications director, has been promoted to director of strategic initiatives, filling the role vacated by Shahra Lambert, who recently joined the Joe Biden administration at NASA.
He previously served as vice president of CATECOMM and as an adviser to numerous gubernatorial, congressional, and statewide campaigns. He most recently served as North Florida Director on the Biden-Harris presidential campaign.
As director of strategic initiatives, Ripple will continue to advise on communications while managing strategic goals, partnerships, and innovation for FDACS.
Fried also elevated Erin Moffet from director of federal affairs to director of strategic communications and federal affairs, where she will continue to oversee the federal affairs team while managing the FDACS Office of Communications.
Moffet has worked in the department since March 2019, first as deputy director of federal affairs. She previously spent nine years working in Washington for members of the Florida delegation, including former U.S. Reps. Alcee L. Hastings, Lois Frankel, Patrick Murphy and Charlie Crist.
Caroline Stonecipher is a new addition to the department. She was appointed as deputy director of communications, joining the department after serving as press secretary for U.S. Sen. Gary Peters of Michigan. She has also served as press secretary for former U.S. Sen. Doug Jones of Alabama and as deputy press secretary for former U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson.
In her new role, she will serve as a spokesperson and assist in the day-to-day communications functions of the department.
Ripple and Moffet began their new roles in July, and Stonecipher joined the department in early August.
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First in Sunburn — Political marketing firm MDW Communications will announce today that Andrew Dolberg will be joining their team as director of strategic initiatives.
Dolberg was the Florida Jewish vote director for Biden’s presidential campaign and most recently served as the director of outreach for U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz.
“Andrew is an incredible talent,” said Michael Worley, the president and founder of MDW communications. “We’re thrilled to have him joining our team.”
Before working as a political operative, Dolberg started an education resources company called Champion Briefs, which focused on improving speech and debate education for high school students.
Outside of his professional work, he serves as a board member for the Voter Participation Project, as the vice-chair of the City of Plantation’s Education Advisory Board, and as programs director for the Broward Jewish Democratic Caucus.
In 2019, Dolberg was named a Rising Star of Florida Politics by FloridaPolitics.com and INFLUENCE Magazine.
MDW is one of the top digital and direct mail firms for Democratic candidates and causes in Florida. It has won 25 national awards for excellence in political communications, including five Reed Awards from “Campaigns & Elections” earlier this year.
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Spotted at Florida Senate Democrats’ “Family Weekend” fundraiser at Disney World this weekend: Sens. Lauren Book, Bobby Powell, Annette Taddeo, and Vic Torres, as well as Melanie DiMuzio, Jose Gonzalez, Sean Pittman, Orlando Pryor, and Stephen Shiver.
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Spotted throwing out the first pitch at the Chicago White Sox vs. Tampa Bay Rays game at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg: Speaker Chris Sprowls.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@wxdam: What a complete failure that almost half the country doesn’t think COVID is a big issue anymore. If you’re one of them, I hear you and ICU.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@Annette_Taddeo: It’s been 40 days since @GovRonDeSantis started selling anti-(Anthony) Fauci gear for his ‘24 campaign. Since then, 3,290 Floridians have died & there’s still no state of emergency in sight despite my various calls. Heck of a job there, Ron.
Tweet, tweet:
—@VoteRandyFine: Despite our passing a law making this illegal, @Facebook has just de-platformed me over a post I made weeks ago against mask mandates. Bad move.
—@AnnaEskamani: 1. Judge halted FL de-platforming law bcuz it’s unconstitutional; 2. You posted cellphone # of a colleague & encouraged ppl to berate her; that’s potentially against the law (HB1, you voted for it); 3. Online actions can cause mental & physical harm to others — this isn’t a game.
—@KevinCate: One day, we’re all going to read books about this pandemic and still be in absolute disbelief and shock that so many refused to save their own lives or give a shit about anyone else.
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
St. Petersburg Primary Election — 1; Boise vs. UCF — 10; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 11; Notre Dame at FSU — 13; NFL regular season begins — 17; Bucs home opener — 17; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 22; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 22; Alabama at UF — 26; Dolphins home opener — 27; Jaguars home opener — 27; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 28; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 39; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 39; MLB regular season ends — 40; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 44; World Series Game 1 — 57; ‘Dune’ premieres — 60; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 65; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 65; Georgia at UF — 68; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 71; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 71; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 74; ‘Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 76; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 77; Miami at FSU — 82; ExcelinEd’s National Summit on Education begins — 87; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 88; FSU vs. UF — 96; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 100; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 109; ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 116; NFL season ends — 139; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 141; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 141; NFL playoffs begin — 145; Super Bowl LVI — 174; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 214; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 258; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 283; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 319; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 331; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 410; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 445.
“Threat to withhold school funds over mask mandates polarizes lawmakers” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — Florida legislators, who control the purse strings over public education, are just as polarized over whether it is right for state officials to withhold money for violating the Governor’s executive order as they are over whether school districts can require students to wear masks. Republican lawmakers said Friday that they support Richard Corcoran’s threat to withhold money from school boards that impose mask mandates. But Democratic members of those same committees, who are the minority party in the Legislature but are a majority in most of the largest school districts, say the executive order by DeSantis violates the Florida Constitution’s provision requiring that schoolchildren be protected from harm.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida adds 150,118 coronavirus cases, 1,486 deaths in past week” via Ian Hodgson of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida officials reported 150,118 coronavirus cases over the seven-day period from Aug. 13-19, an average of more than 21,400 infections per day. This marks the first time the state’s weekly report has recorded a reduction in cases since June 18, more than two months ago. The latest tally brings the total number of cases to 3,027,954 since the pandemic’s first two cases in Florida were reported nearly 18 months ago on March 1, 2020. The state added 1,486 deaths since the previous week’s report, a 141% increase from two weeks ago. This brings the total statewide number of pandemic deaths to 42,252.
“Ron DeSantis promotes Regeneron, a COVID-19 treatment connected to one of his largest donors” via Zac Anderson, John Kennedy and Jeffrey Schweers of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — DeSantis has zeroed in on monoclonal antibody therapy as a lifeline for COVID-19 patients, holding news conferences around the state where he name-checks a specific drugmaker, Regeneron, which is a major investment for one of his largest campaign contributors. “The Regeneron, just so everybody knows, is free,” DeSantis said during an appearance at a monoclonal antibody therapy center the state opened at Camping World Stadium in Orlando. As DeSantis ramps up his reelection bid, the largest donation to his political committee this cycle is a $5 million contribution from Kenneth Griffin, the CEO of hedge fund Citadel, which owns $15.9 million in Regeneron share.
“Florida’s COVID-19 deaths climb as children lead state in positivity rate” via Ian Hodgson and Christopher O’Donnell of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida’s pandemic is getting deadlier and infecting more children. The state reported 1,486 deaths, a 141% increase from two weeks ago. And it’s the most deaths since Feb. 10, as federal data shows Florida approaching the weekly death toll last seen this past winter. In the most recent seven-day period, one out of every four COVID-19 infections recorded by the state was 19 or younger. Younger Floridians are also testing positive at a higher rate than other age groups: Children 12 and under have a positivity rate of 23%, and ages 12-19 have a positivity rate of 25%.
“Has DeSantis muzzled Florida’s top doc? Scott Rivkees, a pediatrician, silent as kids get COVID-19” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Where in the world is Florida’s surgeon general, a pediatrician, no less, as COVID-19 numbers spike for kids in Florida? We may have trouble summoning up his face, but Dr. Rivkees was named to the top medical job in the state by DeSantis in April 2019. The doctor’s official biography on the state’s website is overflowing with pediatrics credentials: He was “professor and chair of the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Florida College of Medicine and physician-in-chief of UF Health Shands Children’s Hospital.” He served as “academic chair of pediatrics at Orlando Health and pediatric chair at Studer Family Children’s Hospital at Sacred Heart in Pensacola.”
“Florida’s peak of the delta wave could be days away, university models show” via Ryan Gillespie of the Orlando Sentinel — One model created by the University of South Florida researchers predicts the state will hit the most daily infections by Aug. 24, bringing about 23,000 that day, said Dr. Edwin Michael. Because the delta variant has infected so many unvaccinated people, and more than 66% of Floridians have been immunized, he said the state will likely hit herd immunity in early September. If immunity gained from infection proves to be long-lasting and if vaccines hold, Michael said the pandemic could end by early next year. “If immunity is long-term, this will be the last significant wave,” he said, noting “flare-ups” could still occur. “There’s a lot of caveats to this.”
“COVID-19 is still a deadly threat to older Floridians” via Ian Hodgson of the Tampa Bay Times — Since the latest wave of cases started rising on June 18, Floridians ages 60 and up have accounted for 16% of infections. But they represent about half of all hospitalizations and 74% of deaths. Nearly 3,500 older adults have died of COVID-19 in Florida since the start of the fourth wave. That’s about three times the number of deaths suffered by every other age group combined. University of Florida epidemiologist Cindy Prins said there’s no way to protect one segment of the population from this level of mass infection. Hundreds of thousands of older adults haven’t received the vaccine in a state where 38% of the total population is unvaccinated.
“Federal vaccination mandate for nursing homes could exacerbate staffing problems in Florida” via Karen Murphy of The Capitolist — An announcement Tuesday by Biden that all nursing home workers will be required to be vaccinated against coronavirus has added additional stress to a health care industry already suffering from an unprecedented staffing shortage. In Florida, over 90% of nursing homes are reporting serious workforce shortages. If these new regulations are added, it is feared that shortage will worsen as staff leaves nursing homes for other health care provider jobs not requiring vaccination. Biden’s intention appears to be the protection of an extremely vulnerable population from the coronavirus.
“COVID-19 shatters hopes for a safe and smooth school year” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — South Florida parents worry their kids will fall further behind, especially if they have to endure multiple weeklong quarantines. Test results showed huge drops in student achievement last year with students learning at home. “Let’s see how much school we can miss this year. Might as well home-school. I mean seriously,” said Jenn Ward, a parent at Hollywood Hills Elementary. More than 1,000 students were sent home from Palm Beach County schools only days into the school year, disturbing parents and short-circuiting their ability to recover from last year’s academic losses. School officials say the delta variant, considered far more contagious than the virus common last school year, makes it likely to increase the number of students quarantined.
— CORONA LOCAL —
“Full ICUs, daily deathwatch: A look at COVID-19, unvaccinated patients in Southwest Florida hospitals” via Frank Gluck of the Fort Myers News-Press — Staffers say they’re exhausted and hoped not to face yet another surge. They believe it has largely been driven by residents’ continued refusal to get vaccinated as the highly contagious delta variant spreads through the state. And too many are still dying. Medical staff said they’re exhausted and losing patience with people who still refuse to take coronavirus seriously and avoid getting the COVID-19 vaccine. It’s a choice with consequences. “This particular disease requires an incredible amount of effort around infection control — it’s very labor-intensive, very tense and very draining,” said Justin Senior, CEO of Safety Net Hospital Alliance of Florida. “People are naturally going to be worn down by incredibly labor-intensive practices that are done under tense circumstances.”
“At least 5 South Florida officers died from COVID-19 over the course of one week” via Melissa Alonso of CNN — In the week beginning August 14, at least five police departments in South Florida reported the deaths of law enforcement officers from COVID-19: Coral Springs Police Sergeant Patrick “Pat” Madison, Miami Beach police officer Edward Perez, West Palm Beach police officer Robert Williams, Florida Highway Patrol Trooper Lazaro R. Febles and Fort Lauderdale police officer Jennifer Sepot. At least 103 law enforcement officers have lost their lives to COVID-19 in 2021, according to the Officer Down Memorial Page, which counts COVID-19 as the leading cause of officer deaths this year.
“Orlando urges reduced water usage as liquid oxygen used to purify water goes to COVID-19 patients” via Kevin Spear of the Orlando Sentinel — The city of Orlando and its water utility made an urgent appeal Friday afternoon for residents to cut back sharply on water usage for weeks because of a pandemic-triggered shortage of liquid oxygen used to purify water. If commercial and residential customers cannot reduce water usage quickly and sufficiently, Orlando Utilities Commission may issue a systemwide alert for boiling water needed for drinking and cooking. Without reductions in water usage, a boil-water alert would come within a week, utility officials said.
—“Winter Park joins Orlando in asking residents to conserve water so liquid oxygen is saved for COVID-19 patients’” via Eric Mock of My News 13
“Sarasota becomes first Donald Trump county to defy DeSantis on school masks” via Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida — After a heated marathon meeting, Sarasota County school officials voted Friday night to require students to wear masks in schools, a blow to DeSantis that comes in a heavily Republican-leaning region of the state. By a 3-2 vote that came late Friday night, Sarasota’s board became the sixth in Florida to mandate masks and the first in a GOP county to defy state laws blocking local COVID-19 requirements. Parents and local residents showed up in droves to protest the decision, telling the board they were “disgusted” and “mad as heck” over their “medical tyranny” during a tense five-hour meeting where multiple people were kicked out for disruptions.
—”Naples physician, a champion for LGBTQ community, dies from COVID-19” via Liz Freeman of the Naples Daily News
—“Lee Health reports first slight COVID-19 hospitalization drop in weeks while Collier cases rise” via Frank Gluck of Naples Daily News
“Leon County Superintendent Rocky Hanna makes masks mandatory for K-8, drops opt-out option” via Tori Lynn Schneider of the Tallahassee Democrat — In an announcement livestreamed on Facebook from a Gilchrist Elementary School classroom, Hanna said: “The reason for this is because these children are not eligible to become vaccinated and remain the most vulnerable in our community.” Hanna said parents have until the end of this school week to complete a form signed by a physician or a licensed psychologist for their child to opt out of wearing a mask. The forms will be available on the Leon County Schools website. “I am in total favor of individual rights and freedoms and the rights of parents; however, I strongly believe that my rights end when they infringe on the rights of others,” Hanna said.
“‘It’s an emergency’: Duval School Board member calls for meeting to get rid of mask opt-out provisions” via Anne Schindler of First Coast News — Just 10 days into the school year, the district is reporting 589 COVID-19 cases. According to Duval County School Board Member Darryl Willie, last year at this time, that number was 20. The data prompted Willie to call for an emergency School Board meeting to remove mask opt-out provisions and toughen COVID-19 protections. In an email, he said it is time to address “an issue that is clearly an emergency, as every day, our students and employees are becoming sick with a life-threatening virus.” As one of the first Florida districts to return to school on Aug. 10, Duval School Board members attempted to craft policies to protect students but not run afoul of DeSantis’ ban on mandatory masks.
— “Duval Schools says health department ‘hasn’t been able to keep pace’ on contact tracing, announces new strategy” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union
—”‘A tremendous loss’: St. Johns County deputy, high school resource officer dies after battle with COVID-19” via First Coast News
“Escambia County Commissioners want better data on COVID-19 deaths” via Jim Little of the Pensacola News Journal — Escambia County Commissioners want better data from the state on the number of COVID-19 deaths as the number of coronavirus hospitalizations in the area remains at all-time highs. Since the outbreak of the virus, 42,252 people have died in Florida. On Friday, the Florida Department of Health reported 346 new deaths across the state. However, the state had not released a breakdown of where those deaths took place since early June and before the delta variant of the COVID-19 virus caused a huge upswing in infections. Florida Department of Health in Escambia County Administrator Marie Mott gave the County Commission an update on COVID-19 numbers and vaccination rates on Thursday.
“‘Pandemic of the unvaccinated’: Here’s why Ascension requires staff vaccination” via Ascension Florida and Gulf Coast Board of Directors for Northwest Florida Daily News — We are the Board of Directors of Ascension Florida and Gulf Coast, which includes Ascension Sacred Heart in Pensacola, Destin, Panama City and Port St. Joe, Ascension Providence in Mobile, and Ascension St. Vincent’s in Jacksonville. We truly value and appreciate our associates and medical staff, and we care about their safety. Therefore, we wholeheartedly support Ascension’s decision that all associates and medical staff members must be vaccinated against COVID-19. This decision is consistent with our mission and with the actions of an ever-increasing number of major health care systems nationwide, which are also requiring COVID-19 vaccinations for all their employees.
“Think DeSantis will pardon your anti-mask violation? Maybe think again.” via Marc Freeman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Despite the Governor’s promise to defend anyone cited over facial-covering rules, it turns out that’s not always the deal. You could still wind up in criminal court. This cautionary tale for anti-maskers is found in the case of a woman arrested in January after she refused to wear a mask at Einstein Bros. Bagels in West Boca, and deputies escorted her out. Cindy Falco DiCorrado turned in her DeSantis “get out of prosecution free” card, but a court on Thursday refused to accept it. Charges of misdemeanor trespass and resisting arrest continue. Palm Beach County Judge Bradley Harper ruled after the Governor’s office recently advised prosecutors that the 62-year-old Boynton Beach woman is not entitled to any breaks.
“FHSAA: COVID-19 cancellations will not be forfeits, playoffs revert to pre-pandemic format” via Adam Fisher of Naples Daily News — The Florida High School Athletic Association is returning to its pre-pandemic playoff formula this season, which means wins against good teams are highly coveted. However, with COVID-19 cases higher than ever in the state, an outbreak of the coronavirus could wipe games off the schedule, which could have a drastic effect on a team’s playoff standings. With that in mind, the FHSAA will not punish teams who are affected by COVID-19. The statewide organization announced Friday that schools will not have to forfeit games that are canceled due to team quarantine. The move means teams won’t have to take a loss on their records if affected by the virus.
— STATEWIDE —
“AP urges DeSantis to end harassing tweets aimed at reporter” via The Associated Press — Twitter suspended the account of DeSantis’ press secretary for violating rules on “abusive behavior” after The Associated Press said her conduct led to a reporter receiving threats and other online abuse. A Twitter spokeswoman said that the DeSantis aide, Christina Pushaw, saw her account locked for 12 hours. Earlier Friday, incoming AP CEO Daisy Veerasingham wrote to DeSantis, asking him to end Pushaw’s “harassing behavior.” AP is seeking to fight online bullying against journalists, a growing trend often triggered by public figures. “You will ban the press secretary of a democratically-elected official while allowing the Taliban to live-tweet their conquest of Afghanistan?” Pushaw said.
“DeSantis blames ‘Beltway clique’ for Afghanistan botch” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — In remarks in Lakeland, the Governor castigated the “Beltway clique”: the “in-group” elites who lurched into what became a 20-year American adventure in the land often called the “graveyard of empires.” DeSantis said the policy failures ran deep in D.C. “After 20 years, there’s been a lot of failures on the political front. And there’s no accountability that I’ve seen. Has anyone been fired? Have we seen anything?” “It just seems like with our national government, if you’re part of the Beltway clique, you won’t have any consequences. As long as you’re part of the ‘in group,’ you can fail upward and keep failing upward. I think there needs to be some accountability for this.”
“Florida Dems urge state to release $7 billion in COVID-19 money to schools” via Robbie Gaffney of WFSU — Florida Democrats have jumped into the fight over school mask mandates. They’ve been urging school board members and superintendents to defy DeSantis and mandate students wear face coverings indoors. But flying just under the mask fray is another issue, how the state should use billions in federal money to help schools mitigate the spread of COVID-19. The federal government has sent billions of dollars to schools across the country amid the pandemic. Districts have used that money to shore up their buildings, install new HVAC units, and hire more mental health counselors in the case of Leon County Schools.
“This Florida insurance company raised rates 36%. Will regulators approve it?” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — State regulators took a hard line on a property insurance company that wants to raise rates by an average of 36% on more than 64,000 homeowners policies, the company’s second big rate hike in a year. During a Friday morning hearing, regulators grilled executives from Southern Fidelity Insurance Co., based in Tallahassee, questioning the company’s methodology, viability and reasons for wanting to raise some homeowners’ rates by more than $3,000. “We made it very clear that we’re concerned about the rating methodology this company has used for years,” said Susanne Murphy, deputy insurance commissioner for the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Online sales taxes, gambling pact boost two-year Florida revenue forecast by $2.6B” via John Haughey of The Center Square — Citing anticipated revenue boosts from online sales taxes and the Seminole Tribe gambling compact, state economists say Florida lawmakers could have up to $2.6 billion more to spend than previously forecast when they convene their 2002 legislative session in January. According to projections revised Wednesday during a General Revenue Fund Revenue Estimating Conference (REC), through June, the state collected $2.4 billion more than forecast between April and June. The REC is comprised of economists from state agencies, the Governor’s Office and the Legislature’s Office of Economic & Demographic Research (OEDR) who meet regularly to update economic projections.
“DeSantis appoints prominent Republicans to Elections Commission, breaking year-plus delay” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — The most recognizable is Carlos Lopez-Cantera, a former state Representative and Miami-Dade Property Appraiser who was Florida’s 19th Lieutenant Governor from 2014 to 2019 under Rick Scott. Since leaving office, he has continued to run his political committee, Helping You, which this year gave to the campaigns of Miami-Dade Judge Elisabeth Espinosa, whom DeSantis appointed in 2019. Another DeSantis appointee, Nicholas Primrose, will chair the FEC, DeSantis’ office said. Primrose served as general counsel for the administrations of both Scott and DeSantis. Lastly, DeSantis appointed retired Miami police detective Marva Preston, whom he endorsed last year in her unsuccessful campaign for Senate District 3.
— 2022 —
“DeSantis’ colossal COVID-19 gamble: schools, vaccinations, masks — and his political future” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — What’s happening now with DeSantis and Florida’s struggles with COVID-19 could ultimately impact not only his political future, but the 2024 presidential contest. DeSantis has bet the house, gambling that his approach is the right one, or at least good enough to keep his supporters enthralled. The denouement may be far off, but many Floridians already have rendered their verdicts, with energized supporters and outraged foes. “I think he is more concerned about his public image than the safety of our children,” wrote Jaye DeCapua, parent of two students at Western High School in Davie.
“Mask mandates, parental choice loom large in 2022” via Bill Cotterell of the Tallahassee Democrat — Florida has never had a statewide election decided by a deadly disease. It’s maybe an overstatement to say DeSantis’ reelection depends on his handling of COVID-19 and how Democrats Crist and Fried exploit the issue against him. But there’s no doubt the pandemic is the biggest thing on the minds of millions of elderly Floridians, parents of school children, classroom teachers, and everyone else who’s been paying attention to some alarming trends. DeSantis faces a full-scale revolt by school officials in at least five big counties defying his edict that no schools may require masks. Biden said he’ll make up any state funds for counties and told recalcitrant Governors to “get out of the way” if they won’t help the feds fight COVID-19.
Assignment editors — Crist will join a group of parents of students with disabilities suing DeSantis and the State of Florida over the Governor’s anti-mask mandate, 10 a.m., livestreamed via Crist’s Facebook page (@CharlieCristFL). RSVP here to receive the Zoom link.
“Jimmy Patronis endorses Griff Griffitts for HD 6” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Bay County Commissioner Griffitts picked up an endorsement from Patronis in the race for House District 6. HD 6 covers coastal Bay County, including Panama City, Lynn Haven and Mexico Beach. It also encompasses Panama City Beach, where Patronis is from, and where his family operates a seafood restaurant, Captain Anderson’s. Griffitts, a Republican, currently holds the District 5 seat on the County Commission. He has previously served as a commissioner on the Panama City Beach Civil Service Board, the Bay County Planning Commission, and the Bay County Tourist Development Council.
“Redistricting makes for unclear battle lines in Brandon legislative race” via William March of the Tampa Bay Times — One of the toughest battles for a legislative seat in the Tampa Bay area in 2022 could break out in the Brandon-based House District 59, a seat now held by first-term Democrat Andrew Learned. But who his Republican opponent might be is unclear. With redistricting about to start, District 59 looks like a prime target for the Republican-led Legislature to try to change its boundaries and flip it red. And there’s a chance they’ll have a big-name candidate, in outgoing Hillsborough County Commissioner Stacy White.
— CORONA NATION —
“FDA poised to grant full approval to Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine” via Lateshia Beachum, Derek Hawkins, Adela Suliman, Bryan Pietsch, María Luisa Paúl, Tyler Pager and Dan Diamond of The Washington Post — The FDA is expected to grant full approval to Pfizer-BioNTech’s coronavirus vaccine in the coming days, according to four people with knowledge of the plans. If approved, the vaccine would be the first in the United States to receive full licensure, and it could result in private businesses issuing a new wave of vaccine mandates. Public health experts have argued that the FDA’s move to grant full approval will be a pivotal moment in the fight against the pandemic, predicting that it would ease the ability of employers to mandate that millions of holdout Americans get vaccinated.
“Delta variant likely to bring a fall and winter of masks, vaccine mandates, anxiety” via Rong-Gong Lin II and Luke Money of Yahoo News — The rise of the Delta variant has upended previous optimistic projections of herd immunity and a return to normal life, with many health experts believing mask mandates and tougher vaccine requirements will be needed in the coming months to avoid more serious coronavirus surges. The fall and winter will bring new challenges as people stay indoors more often and vaccine immunity begins to wane. The rapid spread of Delta among the unvaccinated shows that significant increases in inoculations will help stop the spread. In fact, officials are now preparing to provide booster shots to those who already got their first series of vaccinations, saying the extra dose is needed to keep people protected.
“More children are hospitalized with COVID-19, and doctors fear it will get worse” via Sarah Toy and Julie Wernau of The Wall Street Journal — Hospitals in the South and Midwest say they are treating more children with COVID-19 than ever and are preparing for worse surges to come. Cases have jumped over the past six weeks as the highly contagious Delta variant spreads primarily among unvaccinated people. That is leading to more sick kids in places where community spread of the variant is high. Children under age 12 aren’t yet eligible to be vaccinated, and vaccination rates for those between 12 and 17 remain relatively low. Recent data show pediatric hospitalizations for COVID-19 are at the highest point since the agency began tracking them last year, driven by states that have been hit hard by the Delta variant.
“The science of masking kids at school remains uncertain” via David Sweig of New York Magazine — At the end of May, the CDC published a notable, yet mostly ignored, large-scale study of COVID-19 transmission in American schools. A few major news outlets covered its release by briefly reiterating the study’s summary: masking then-unvaccinated teachers and improving ventilation with more fresh air were associated with a lower incidence of the virus in schools. Distancing, hybrid models, classroom barriers, HEPA filters, and, most notably, requiring student masking were each found not to have a statistically significant benefit. In other words, these measures could not be said to be effective.
“How the U.S. vaccination drive came to rely on an army of consultants” via Isaac Stanley-Becker of The Washington Post — When Gavin Newsom outsourced key components of California’s vaccine rollout to the private sector during the pandemic’s darkest days last winter, the Democratic Governor promised the changes would benefit the most vulnerable. His “No. 1” reason for handing the reins to Blue Shield of California, an Oakland-based health insurance company, was “equity” delivering vaccines to those at greatest risk, many in communities of color, he said in February. But the $15-million contract with Blue Shield, plus another $13 million for McKinsey, did not deliver on that promise.
“Vaccine resistance in the military remains strong, a dilemma for Pentagon as mandate looms” via Max Hauptman of The Washington Post — The Pentagon’s effort to mandate coronavirus vaccination for all 1.3 million active-duty service members will continue to face resistance from a segment of the force, troops and observers say until military leaders devise an effective strategy for countering pervasive doubt about the pandemic’s seriousness and widespread misinformation about the shots designed to bring it under control. When Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin announced earlier this month that he would seek to require inoculation no later than mid-September, Pentagon data showed that thousands of personnel, about one-third of the force, remained unvaccinated.
—“Rev. Jesse Jackson, wife Jacqueline hospitalized for COVID-19” via The Associated Press
—”COVID-19 cases overwhelm the Gulf Coast, leaving region with no I.C.U. beds.” via Dan Levin and Daniel E. Slotnik
—”Georgia nursing shortage at crisis levels” via Ariel Hart and Willoughby Mariano of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
—”A Texas GOP official’s COVID-19 death went viral. Then came calls for vaccination — and bitter divides.” via Hannah Knowles of The Washington Post
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Now hiring: Inquire within” via Annie Gowen of The Washington Post — A record 10 million jobs are vacant, and many workers remain on the sidelines, making do on their unemployment benefits and pandemic relief checks, struggling to find child care, and worrying about the rapidly spreading delta variant preying on the vulnerable and vaccine-resistant. Workers wanted remote jobs and less commute, jobs shifted to industries such as warehousing that might not be nearby, and workers could afford to be choosy and hold out for higher wages during a period of historic government aid. Labor force analysts had once predicted that students’ return to classes would bring more parents back to the workplace and lessen the burden on employers, but the fast-spreading delta variant has quashed those hopes.
“In Florida, DeSantis cut jobless aid just as virus began terrifying new wave” via Yeganeh Torbati of The Washington Post — Few political leaders have rebuffed federal economic aid and public health guidance as much as DeSantis, a presumptive 2024 presidential candidate whose political campaign sold T-shirts that read, “Don’t Fauci My Florida.” His derision of Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, and virtually any other public health expert he disagrees with has made him a conservative hero but a divisive figure in his home state, which is now leading the nation in the number of people hospitalized with COVID-19.
“The great divide: Gap between Miami’s haves and have-nots widened during COVID-19” via Rob Wile of the Miami Herald — While many workers with jobs that could be performed remotely were spared from significant financial damage, many of those with lower-paying service jobs — occupations that dominate the South Florida economy — have faced hardship. It’s a trend mirrored nationally: According to The Wall Street Journal, more than 70% of the increase in household wealth in 2020 went to the top 20% of income earners — with about one-third going just to the top 1%. Even as people from wealthier parts of the country come to Miami to take advantage of its weather, lifestyle, looser COVID-19 rules, and relatively lower cost of living, existing disparities have grown worse.
— MORE CORONA —
“The vaccinated are worried and scientists don’t have answers” via Kristen V. Brown and Rebecca Torrence of Bloomberg — Anecdotes tell us what the data can’t: Vaccinated people appear to be getting the coronavirus at a surprisingly high rate. But exactly how often isn’t clear, nor is it certain how likely they are to spread the virus to others. And now, there’s growing concern that vaccinated people may be more vulnerable to serious illness than previously thought. There’s a dearth of scientific studies with concrete answers, leaving public policymakers and corporate executives to formulate plans based on fragmented information. While some are renewing mask mandates or delaying office reopenings, others cite the lack of clarity to justify staying the course. It can all feel like a mess.
What Michelle Schorsch is reading — “CDC issues warning to not cruise to those at high-risk whether vaccinated or not” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — The CDC updated its guidance Friday to warn those at high risk of severe illness from COVID-19 to avoid cruise ships, whether they’ve had the vaccine or not. It is a shift from the previous warning that only targeted unvaccinated travelers. “Severe illness means that a person with COVID-19 may need: hospitalization, intensive care, a ventilator to help them breathe or they may even die,” according to the CDC. The updated guidance specifically warns those at high risk, including older adults, people with certain medical conditions and people who are pregnant or recently pregnant.
“Stop horsing around with ivermectin to treat COVID-19, warns FDA” via Ian Fisher of Bloomberg — The FDA issued a strong and unusual warning on Saturday: “You are not a horse. You are not a cow. Seriously, y’all. Stop it.” On Friday, Mississippi’s health department issued a warning that more than 70% of recent calls to the state’s poison center came after people took ivermectin bought at livestock supply centers. The FDA was reacting to alarms from Mississippi, the state with the worst outbreak in the U.S., that people have been taking ivermectin to treat or prevent COVID-19. The drug is often used against parasites in livestock. Thomas Dobbs, the state health officer, said earlier this week he knew of only one hospitalization but was hearing reports of people taking the drug “as a preventive.”
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden sees dip in support amid new COVID-19 cases” via Julie Pace and Hannah Fingerhut of The Associated Press — Biden is facing a summer slump, with Americans taking a notably less positive view of his handling of the coronavirus pandemic and his job approval rating ticking down. A new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds that 54% of Americans approve of Biden’s job performance, down slightly from 59% last month. While that’s still a relatively solid rating for a President during his first year in office, particularly given the nation’s deep political polarization, it’s a worrying sign for Biden as he faces the greatest domestic and foreign policy challenges of his presidency so far. The biggest warning sign for the President in the survey centers on his handling of the pandemic.
—“Biden’s job ratings decline amid COVID-19 surge, Afghanistan withdrawal in NBC News poll’” via Mark Murray of NBC News
“Four weeks in July: Inside the Biden administration’s struggle to contain the delta surge” via Annie Linskey, Yasmeen Abutaleb and Tyler Page of The Washington Post — The surge of delta cases that overran the country forced Biden and his top aides and Cabinet members to reckon with their overconfidence, which led to a host of decisions — on masks, vaccines and other pivotal issues — that had to be reversed or revised as the crisis spiraled out of control. The administration had been caught flat-footed — and then took weeks to enact a plan in an attempt to catch up. By the end of July, the White House began to take a more muscular approach to vaccinations. But these measures came only after the virus exacted a massive toll, with nearly 1.3 million new infections, 8,633 deaths and signs of a weakening economy.
“Biden’s view of job comes into focus after Afghan collapse” via Jonathan Lemire and Zeke Miller of The Associated Press — Biden made up his mind about Afghanistan months, really years, ago. For more than a decade, Biden advocated for an end to American involvement in Afghanistan. But he did so as something of an outsider, a Senator whose ultimate power came from a single vote on Capitol Hill or a Vice President who advised another president. And despite the rapid collapse of the Afghan government, spurring a humanitarian crisis and searing criticism at home and from traditional allies, he was resolute, at times defiant. He took responsibility and, in turn, leveled blame at his predecessor.
“Biden is betting Americans will forget about Afghanistan” via Peter Nicholas of The Atlantic — The President’s withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan simply aligns him with everyone else who has given up on the notion that the military could mold a fractious country into a stable democratic ally. The administration hopes that grisly images of desperate Afghans clinging to a C-17 fade, replaced by collective relief that no more Americans will die in a murky, brutal war that spanned two decades and four presidencies. Despite the Taliban’s rapid takeover of Afghanistan, White House officials and people close to Biden don’t foresee his decision hurting Democrats in next year’s midterm elections, nor in the presidential race that follows.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Trump booed at Alabama rally after encouraging crowd to get COVID-19 vaccine” via Christina Zhao of Newsweek — Trump was booed by his own supporters during a rally in Cullman, Alabama Saturday night after he encouraged the crowd to get vaccinated against COVID-19. “I believe totally in your freedoms, I do, you gotta do what you gotta do, but I recommend take the vaccines. I did it. It’s good,” he said, drawing boos from the crowd of supporters. “That’s OK, that’s all right,” Trump continued, brushing off the disapproval. “But I happen to take the vaccine. If it doesn’t work, you’ll be the first to know. But it is working. You do have your freedoms; you have to maintain that.”
“‘Trump was an inspiration for me:’ Matt Gaetz tries to shift the narrative with a MAGA romance’” via Abigail Tracy of Vanity Fair — Gaetz has always worked hard to manage his image. Now that he’s under investigation for potential sex trafficking, he wants to discuss his engagement. His description of his meet-cute with Luckey sounded like Cinderella fanfic for the MAGA world, what they referred to multiple times as their “COVID-19 love story.” “For me, it was love at first sight,” he said. “For her, it took six dates.” After Kimberly Guilfoyle‘s birthday party, Gaetz continued to court fiance Ginger Luckey, inviting her to the Kentucky Derby as a pretense to continue talking. As the allegations against Gaetz started piling up, there was speculation that Luckey would break things off. But now they’re married. “Never Left. Never Leaving,” Luckey posted to social media.
“In Iowa, Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene pick up where Trump left off” via Astead W. Herndon of The New York Times — Far from Washington, and even farther from their home congressional districts, Representatives Gaetz and Greene found their people. As the two Republican lawmakers spoke at an “America First” rally in Des Moines, held in an auditorium that often hosts people with presidential aspirations, up was down and misinformation was gospel. Greene denounced COVID-19 vaccines to applause. Both declared Trump the rightful winner of the 2020 election.
“Barron Trump to attend exclusive school near Mar-a-Lago” via The Associated Press — Trump’s youngest son will be attending an exclusive private school not far from Mar-a-Lago. The Palm Beach Post reports that 15-year-old Trump will be attending Oxbridge Academy starting next week. Administrators at the West Palm Beach school sent an email to parents on Wednesday telling them about his arrival with the family’s permission. The school wanted to alert the parents that a small contingent of Secret Service agents will accompany Barron. Oxbridge was founded in 2011 by billionaire Bill Koch. He is the brother of Charles and the late David Koch, who ran the family’s Koch Industries.
— CRISIS —
“FBI finds scant evidence U.S. Capitol attack was coordinated” via Mark Hosenball and Sarah N. Lynch of Reuters — The FBI has found scant evidence that the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol was the result of an organized plot to overturn the presidential election result, according to four current and former law enforcement officials. Though federal officials have arrested more than 570 alleged participants, the FBI at this point believes the violence was not centrally coordinated by far-right groups or prominent supporters of Trump. “Ninety to 95% of these are one-off cases,” said a former senior law enforcement official with knowledge of the investigation.
“Capitol Police officer who shot Ashli Babbitt exonerated in internal probe” via Ken Dilanian and Rich Schapiro of NBC News — The Capitol Police officer who fatally shot Babbitt outside a door of the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6 riot has been formally exonerated after an internal investigation. The officer, whose name has not been released, opened fire on Babbitt as she and a mob of other Trump supporters tried to enter the Capitol forcefully. Video of the shooting showed Babbitt in front of a crowd of rioters trying to get through a door leading to where members of Congress were being evacuated on the House side of the building.
—D.C. MATTERS —
“‘Curveballs and obstacles’ face Nancy Pelosi this week as Democrats spar over $3.5 trillion budget plan” via Tony Room of The Washington Post — House Speaker Pelosi continues to grapple with persistent political divides among her own fractious caucus. Despite wide-ranging support for some of the new spending, the party’s liberal and centrist wings remain at odds over how exactly to proceed, raising the potential for defections that Democrats simply cannot afford in a chamber where they hold only a slim advantage. The tensions have played out over what should have been a routine process to bring the budget to a final vote. Nine centrists, led by Rep. Josh Gottheimer, have signaled they could vote against the proposal unless Pelosi first permits a vote on a bipartisan, roughly $1.2 trillion bill to improve the country’s infrastructure. The Senate adopted both packages before departing for recess earlier this month.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“The Surfside condo collapse triggered evacuations. Hundreds are still waiting to go home.” via María Luisa Paúl of The Washington Post — For some 20 years, Alcira Guarnizo lived a peaceful life in North Miami Beach’s Crestview Towers, a 156-unit condominium. The building where Guarnizo lived was the first deemed “structurally and electrically unsafe,” prompting an immediate evacuation. Nearly two months later, the complex’s over 300 residents remain displaced. Several have found refuge with relatives and friends. Since the Surfside disaster, two other buildings have been evacuated in Miami, some late at night while residents were getting ready to sleep.
“In St. Petersburg Mayor’s race, development dollars play major role in campaigns” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — St. Petersburg’s next mayor is going to have a large influence on the future development of this growing city, which makes it unsurprising, perhaps, that real estate companies, developers and investors have taken an active interest in the race’s front-runners. Ken Welch and Darden Rice have both brought in sizable sums from these groups, as has Robert Blackmon to a lesser extent. Thousands more have poured in through the candidates’ affiliated political committees, which don’t have the $1,000 cap on donations that campaign contributions do. Overall, Rice has amassed the largest pot of money, totaling just under $750,000 through her campaign and political committee.
“Woman arrested after fight outside Universal’s VelociCoaster ride, records show” via Grace Toohey of the Orlando Sentinel — A New York woman was arrested in July after officers said she punched a woman in the face during an argument in line for Universal’s VelociCoaster ride, records show. Shaeika Allen, 28, was arrested on a charge of felony battery after surveillance video showed she punched the woman on July 9 during the dispute, her arrest report said. Allen has since been charged in court with misdemeanor battery, and the case remains open, records show. The woman who officers said Allen punched, who the Orlando Sentinel is not identifying because she was the victim of an alleged battery, suffered a cut and bruise on her face, which the report said required stitches or glue.
— TOP OPINION —
“Legislators should work with school boards, not poison them with politics” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — Florida school districts need more support from state politicians, not more politics. Yet, a proposed constitutional amendment would make all school board races partisan. Florida’s public schools are already dealing with the new COVID-19 surge. They don’t need a new political surge. Some school districts have dared to defy DeSantis and the entrenched Republican radicalism by setting policies that emphasize the safety of students. Some districts have dared to suggest that students benefit from studying race issues. Some districts actually prioritize traditional public schools over charter schools.
— OPINIONS —
“Florida must take action to protect manatees, too” via Jon Paul “J.P.” Brooker for the Orlando Sentinel — In its Aug. 15 editorial, the Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board correctly calls for the relisting of manatees as an endangered species, but notes it has “zero confidence that the current Legislature and Governor are going to have a fit of courage and pass new environmental rules to crack down on polluters.” The trouble with this “zero confidence” position is that it has the effect of letting the pressure off Tallahassee in favor of federal action. The reality is, we must have both federal action and state action, or our iconic Floridian ocean and coasts are doomed.
“Why the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy supports FPL rate increase” via Stephen A. Smith for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Southern Alliance for Clean Energy (SACE) is a nonprofit organization committed to a cleaner and more equitable energy future in Florida and the Southeast. We have a long history of both working with and at times challenging Florida’s big electric utilities to increase investment in clean energy, such as solar power, electric vehicle infrastructure and energy efficiency. If approved, the agreement will reduce the rate increase FPL originally proposed through 2025 by over $400 million and drive significant investment in clean energy technologies.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Floridians are anxiously awaiting the latest in the modern-day soap opera that is Florida’s anti-mask mandate.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— But the Governor has no intention of moving on and relishes a showdown with the Biden administration.
— The latest COVID-19 stats show almost 151,000 cases and 1,486 deaths in the past week. But DeSantis says the worst may be over.
— The Governor opens three more Regeneron centers where people with COVID-19 can be treated before they end up in a hospital. Sen. Kathleen Passidomo says they were a huge help when she and her husband caught COVID-19.
— The unemployment rate is up again. Florida created 68,000 new jobs, but the workforce grew by 83,000.
— Wedding bells for Gaetz in Southern California.
— And finally, the story of a Florida Man charged with a felony over a Snickers Bar. If only he hadn’t pulled out that pocketknife.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Marvel just dropped the final “Eternals” trailer, and now we know why they didn’t help defeat Thanos” via Nora Dominick of BuzzFeed — While Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings is next up for the MCU, it’s already time to start getting pumped for Marvel’s Eternals, which will hit theaters in November. Directed by Academy Award winner Chloé Zhao, Eternals will follow the Eternals, who have secretly been living on Earth for over 7,000 years and have been tasked with protecting humans from the Deviants. This epic new movie kicks off when the Eternals are forced to come back together to stop a new threat. So, like everyone, I’ve been dying to know where the heck the Eternals were while the Avengers were battling Thanos; listen, our team won in the end, but a little extra help couldn’t have hurt.
To watch the trailer, click on the image below:
“McKenzie Milton’s orthopedic surgeon details the FSU QB’s long road back to football” via Matt Murschel of the Orlando Sentinel — Milton’s long-awaited return to the football field is nearly three long, arduous years in the making. Few people understand the pain and sacrifice the Florida State quarterback has endured since suffering a catastrophic knee injury on that fateful Friday on Nov. 23, 2018, at Raymond James Stadium. But if anyone can, it’s Bruce Levy. Levy is one of the top orthopedic surgeons in the country, working at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota for the past 14 years. And throughout his 22 years, he’s never seen an injury like the one Milton suffered. Milton suffered a knee dislocation where the thigh bone and the lower leg bone were completely dislocated.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Celebrating today are former Rep. Margaret Good, Alexis Lambert, Peggy McKeel, and Peret Pass. Belated best wishes to Sen. Dennis Baxley, Rep. Kristen Arrington, and Kurt Browning.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Axios AM
Happy Monday! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,196 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Fadel Allassan.
🎓 Please join Axios’ Russell Contreras, Sara Kehaulani Goo and Erica Pandey tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET for a Hard Truths virtual event on systemic racism in higher education. Guests include Howard University president Wayne A.I. Frederick, Common App CEO Jenny Rickard and Harvard’s Anthony Jack. Register here.
President Biden in the Situation Room yesterday. Photo: The White House
President Biden aimed three numbered messages at three specific audiences during Sunday afternoon remarks on Afghanistan, Axios politics editor Glen Johnson points out:
- To Fox News viewers: “One, planes taking off from Kabul are not flying directly to the United States. They’re landing at U.S. military bases and transit centers around the world.”
- To moderates in both parties: “Number two, at these sites where they’re landing, we are conducting … security screenings for everyone who is not a U.S. citizen or a lawful permanent resident. Anyone arriving in the United States will have undergone a background check.”
- To progressives: “Number three, once screened and cleared, we will welcome these Afghans, who helped us in the war effort over the last 20 years, to their new home in the United States of America. Because that’s who we are. That’s what America is.”
Between the lines: This “Meet the Press” graphic captures new reasons for White House worry.
- Biden’s approval in a new NBC News poll was down 15 points in four months — with big drops among independents, rural residents and white respondents.
- The poll was conducted Aug. 14-17. Kabul fell Aug. 15.
After talking to 40 leading Democrats, The New York Times reported (subscription) under the headline, “As Biden Faces a Political Crisis, His Party Looks On in Alarm”:
- “The harrowing [Afghanistan] images appalled even the president’s staunchest supporters, many of whom — like a majority of the American public — support the decision to remove American troops.”
- “But some of them worry the execution of the withdrawal has undermined Mr. Biden’s central campaign promise to restore a steady hand.”
Congressional Republicans, already raring for next year’s midterms, savored NBC’s big swing toward the GOP among independents.
- Among all voters, 47% want Democrats to stay in charge; 46% want a Republican-controlled Congress.
In Gallup polling Aug. 2-17, Biden’s approval was 49% — his lowest to date, but statistically unchanged from 50% in July.
A danger sign for the White House in a CBS News/YouGov poll out yesterday: 63% approve of removing U.S. troops from Afghanistan, but only 47% approve of Biden’s handling of the withdrawal.
- That’s down from 60% approval of Biden in July.
Biden’s bottom line: “I think that history is going to record this was the logical, rational and right decision to make,” he said yesterday.
Illustration: Rae Cook/Axios
The Delta variant is keeping college students from resuming campus life as normal, Neal Rothschild writes from a new Generation Lab/Axios poll.
- In our poll of 846 students nationwide from 2-year and 4-year schools (margin of error: ±3.4 points), we asked about going to an indoor party … dancing with others … and close conversations without masks.
- 55% of students considered none of those to be safe.
College students are big fans of vaccine mandates — in many cases, bigger fans than their university administrators.
- 73% say their school should implement a vaccine mandate for those on campus. 52% say their schools are doing so.
- 86% say they’re fully vaccinated. 6% say they definitely won’t get the shots.
Danielle Alberti, Axios data visualization editor, noticed that today is the 10th anniversary of the 5.8-magnitude earthquake that closed the Washington Monument for nearly three years.
- “[S]ince the Washington Monument is currently closed … following a lightning strike,” she wrote on Saturday, “I decided to look up how much time it’s been closed in the last 10 years.”
The bottom line: The monument has been closed 69% of the time since.
- Watch a video about the earthquake.
Above, Vice President Harris holds a news conference in Singapore today with Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, as she begins a Southeast Asian swing that will take her to Vietnam later this week.
Photo: Alan Poizner/The Tennessean via AP
Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee comforts Shirley Foster, who had just learned a friend of hers was among 22 people who died in the state’s flooding. Get the latest.
Rachel Maddow reached a multiyear deal with NBCUniversal that takes her from being MSNBC show host to content brand and “studio boss,” as a source put it to me:
- On top of “The Rachel Maddow Show,” she’ll run an as-yet-unnamed production company that could include books, documentaries, movies, TV series and podcasts.
- Much of the output will be nonfiction. But her empire includes anything where she’s “a purveyor of great storytelling,” the source said.
The big picture: Maddow’s renewal marks a major win for new NBCUniversal News Group Chairman Cesar Conde, Axios’ Sara Fischer reports.
Suitors included WarnerMedia (including Warner Bros. and CNN), Disney (including ABC and ESPN), Netflix and Spotify, the source said.
- Endeavor CEO Ari Emanuel and President Mark Shapiro were her new reps for the deal.
Between the lines: Maddow loves her day job and her staff, but wanted a bigger role and to stretch her brand.
- She’s MSNBC’s top-rated host, and there’s no succession plan. So the channel needed to keep her for the 2024 election.
- Now she’ll hire staff to unearth projects and find source material in the vein of “Bag Man,” her podcast and N.Y. Times bestseller about Spiro Agnew, who resigned as Richard Nixon’s vice president.
The bottom line: As the definitions of media, content, distributions and platforms all change, the Maddow brand now has more outlets than ever.
- Read a “Bag Man” excerpt (Click “Read an excerpt” — pops up).
Cover: Simon & Schuster
Senate President Pro Tem Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) — Appropriations chairman, the most senior member of Congress, and the last of the “Watergate Babies” — will be out in April with a memoir, “The Road Taken.”
- Leahy, who presided over President Trump’s second impeachment trial, “established himself as a moral leader and liberal pioneer over four decades spanning nine presidential administrations,” Simon & Schuster says in the announcement.
- “Senator Leahy’s memoir is populated by … every President from Ford onward, a fresh-faced Ted Kennedy, a dying Hubert Humphrey, a 33-year-old son of Scranton named Joe Biden, a quick-witted Barry Goldwater, a freshman Senator and trash-talking gym-mate named Barack Obama, and a scrappy newcomer … Bernard Sanders.
Behind the scenes: Leahy was represented by Robert Barnett and Emily Alden of Williams & Connolly. Barnett has urged Leahy to write a memoir for decades.
Many pop-up restaurants, started as COVID stopgaps by struggling chefs and owners, are showing staying power as consumers continue to embrace takeout and delivery, AP’s Mae Anderson writes.
- The pop-ups range from a ramen maker appearing for one night at an established bar or restaurant, to a taco maker using an unused space to temporarily host diners, to a chef offering meatballs for delivery only.
Between the lines: The COVID pop-ups helped bring buzz to existing restaurants that host them. And some have even morphed into permanent new businesses.
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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: Who’ll blink first: Pelosi or the Mod Squad?
DRIVING THE DAY
THIS WEEK’S BIG STORYLINE: THE PELOSI-GOTTHEIMER GAME OF CHICKEN — The House returns to Washington today for a rare mid-August-recess vote on Democrats’ $3.5 trillion budget — at least in theory.
One little problem: Speaker NANCY PELOSI still doesn’t have the votes to pass it.
The nine moderate House Democrats led by Rep. JOSH GOTTHEIMER (N.J.) say they’re not backing down from their demand that the House vote on the Senate-passed bipartisan infrastructure deal before they’ll support the fiscal blueprint laying out plans for the massive reconciliation bill.
They tripled down on that in a splashy new op-ed in WaPo that published Sunday night. “Time kills deals,” they wrote. “This is an old business saying and the essence of why we are pushing to get the bipartisan infrastructure bill through Congress. … We are firmly opposed to holding the president’s infrastructure legislation hostage to reconciliation, risking its passage and the bipartisan support behind it.”
Few in the caucus have the gall to go up against the speaker known for her “iron fist in a velvet glove” approach to leadership. And that all but ensures that the next 48 hours will be … interesting.
We made a few calls about this. Here’s where things stand:
— ON THE CONTINUED DEADLOCK: For several days now, House Democratic leaders have warned their members in a series of “Dear Colleague” letters that President JOE BIDEN’s agenda is in peril if these moderates tank this vote.
Over the weekend, Pelosi released her latest such missive, writing that “any delay to passing the budget resolution threatens the timetable for delivering the historic progress and the transformative vision that Democrats share.” Senior Democrats hoped that a key phrase in the letter would mollify some of these members: a promise to work “hard” to pass both the BIF and the reconciliation bill by Oct. 1.
But sources close to the group of moderates tell us that this isn’t going to cut it. The language, they say, makes it pretty clear that if the reconciliation package isn’t ready by then, the BIF vote would also slip — which is the opposite of what they want.
Ultimately, the letter might have done more harm than good with moderates because it also doubled down on calls for a $3.5 trillion reconciliation package, suggesting that the number was “agreed to in the Senate.” However, both Sens. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) and KYRSTEN SINEMA (D-Ariz.) have made it crystal clear that they won’t support anything close to that number, and moderate House Dems don’t want to be forced to walk the plank on a massive bill if it’s just going to get cut in half by the Senate.
— THE PELOSI COLD SHOULDER? The standoff has chilled relationships between the speaker and her moderates such that over the past few days, they were barely speaking. Pelosi’s camp says the speaker has been in direct contact with at least some members of the group, but sources close with the group say she has not contacted most of them directly.
Privately, they complain that Pelosi hasn’t just turned a cold shoulder, she’s all but blessed a public-shaming campaign against them. Over the weekend, the speaker’s office blasted out letters from the leaders of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus and the Democratic Women’s Caucus, urging all House Democrats to vote yes on the budget. Local groups are also coming for them. (There’s more where that came from …)
The moderates allege that the pressure has veered into political threats: As our Sarah Ferris scooped Friday, DCCC Chair SEAN PATRICK MALONEY (N.Y.) and his staff have been calling front-line members and warning them not to block the budget — calls some saw as a threat that they could be cut off financially if they don’t step in line.
— OUTSIDE GROUPS ARE ALSO GETTING INVOLVED. On the right, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is backing these moderate Democrats in full, cheering on their protest and providing air cover back home by running ads on Facebook and local radio thanking them for standing up to leadership.
Meanwhile, on the left, progressive groups like Justice Democrats are turning the “Mod Squad” into villains on the left and fundraising off of it. One email blast with the subject line “Josh Gottheimer” attacked the leader of the centrist Problem Solvers Caucus as “one of the most conservative Democrats … being celebrated right now by the worst of the political establishment for leading an effort to block new investments in child care, paid family leave, Medicare, and fighting the climate crisis.”
Right now, four big questions hang over all of this:
QUESTION 1: IS THERE A POSSIBLE DEAL? This is unclear right now. It’s hard to see a path forward if both sides stick to their original demands. But Pelosi is the queen of finding ways to twist arms, and each member has a long list of legislative priorities she could tuck into some must-pass bill down the road.
Some on the Hill have privately wondered whether leadership could promise to put the BIF on the floor by a date certain in September — even if the reconciliation bill takes longer than expected to craft. But progressives would almost certainly balk at this option, as they view delaying the BIF as their best shot at passing the reconciliation package.
QUESTION 2: SO … WHAT IF MODS REALLY DO BLOCK THE BUDGET? On Capitol Hill, there’s a tendency for every crisis to feel like the end of the world. But the reality is that even if this budget vote goes down this week, it isn’t the end of Biden’s reconciliation package — at least not yet.
Yes, Democrats need to pass this budget to unlock reconciliation, the fast-tracking tool that enabled the party to circumvent the filibuster in the Senate. But they actually have a few weeks to get there. Many of the House committees have already started drafting their parts of the reconciliation package, and a failed vote would not necessarily stop that work. It could, however, halt committee markups of the legislation, our smart colleagues on the budget team tell us. And, of course, failure would also be a major embarrassment for Pelosi, who doesn’t lose on these issues.
QUESTION 3: WILL THE RULE PASS? Before they worry about mustering the votes to pass the budget, the House will first have to adopt the rule governing debate for this process. It’s not clear if Democratic leaders have the votes to even do that, though the roll call is expected tonight. Settle in for a late one and a long 48 hours afterward.
QUESTION 4: WHEN WILL BIDEN GET INVOLVED? It’s one thing to say no to the speaker of the House. It’s another thing to say that to the president. There’s a lot of speculation that Biden will at some point get pulled into this mess and have to help corral votes. A White House official told us Biden, Cabinet members and senior White House staff are in touch with leadership and rank and file on this matter. The plan: continue to stress the need to expand Medicare, make rich Americans pay more in taxes, cut the cost of prescription drugs, tackle climate change, etc. To do this, failure is not an option.
— More table-setters: “Deeply Divided, House Democrats Battle Over Priorities and Politics,” by NYT’s Jonathan Weisman … “‘Curveballs and obstacles’ face Pelosi this week as Democrats spar over $3.5 trillion budget plan,” by WaPo’s Tony Romm … “Pelosi, Centrist Democrats in Standoff With Key Vote Ahead,” by WSJ’s Kristina Peterson
Good Monday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
JOIN US — As the Biden administration continues to grapple with the bungled pullout from Afghanistan, Rachael and Eugene will dissect the latest with Rep. DAN CRENSHAW (R-Texas). Crenshaw — a former Navy SEAL who deployed five times overseas, including in Afghanistan — will discuss the precarious situation, his own experience and what he thinks should happen in the coming days, weeks and months. Join us Tuesday at 10 a.m.
BIDEN’S MONDAY:
— 9:30 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 10 a.m.: Biden will meet with his national security team on Afghanistan in the Situation Room.
— 3:30 p.m.: Biden will welcome the 2020 WNBA champion Seattle Storm in the East Room.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 2 p.m.
THE HOUSE will meet at 5 p.m. for legislative business, with first votes expected around 6:30 p.m. The Rules Committee will meet at 11 a.m. to formulate rules on the vehicle for the bipartisan infrastructure bill, the $3.5 trillion budget reconciliation bill and the John Lewis voting rights bill.
THE SENATE is out.
BIDEN’S WEEK AHEAD: The president will meet with his national security team on Afghanistan every day. Also:
— Tuesday: Biden will meet virtually with the G-7 leaders on Afghanistan.
— Wednesday: Biden will meet with private-sector leaders on cybersecurity.
— Thursday: Biden will welcome Israeli PM NAFTALI BENNETT for a White House visit.
PLAYBOOK READS
TALIBAN TAKEOVER
THE KABUL AIRLIFT — On Sunday night, the White House announced that over a 12-hour period at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul on Sunday, approximately 1,700 people were evacuated on 8 U.S. military flights, and 3,400 people via coalition aircraft.
— Biden is considering extending the Aug. 31 deadline to withdraw troops in order to facilitate the evacuation of Americans and Afghan allies. Among those lobbying for it: British PM BORIS JOHNSON, according to the Telegraph.
— Even as the U.S. has extended its perimeter around Kabul’s airport — more on that from Kelly Hooper — chaos reigns. “The scenes are apocalyptic,” PBS NewsHour’s Jane Ferguson, who is in Kabul, told NYT’s Roger Cohen. “People are fainting and dying. Children are going missing.”
— The potential for an ISIS attack near the airport is real, according to national security adviser JAKE SULLIVAN, and the NYT’s Eric Schmitt writes that the possibilities “range from a missile attack against a transport plane taking off or landing … to a bomb-laden truck or suicide bombers infiltrating the crowd outside the airport.”
— Afghan staffers at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul feel “deeply disheartened” by the efforts to evacuate them from the country, and “have expressed a sense of betrayal and distrust in the U.S. government,” NBC’s Abigail Williams and Yuliya Talmazan write in an unsparing piece.
TOP-ED — “All the President’s Yes-Men,” by Tevi Troy in the WSJ: “JFK remade his decision-making process after the Bay of Pigs debacle. Biden could learn something.”
— But Biden is not inclined to “fire any senior national security officials over the chaos in Kabul unless the situation drastically deteriorates,” write Axios’ Hans Nichols and Jonathan Swan.
WHAT RON KLAIN IS RETWEETING — Josh Marshall (@joshtpm): “If I’m not mistaken TONY BLAIR, most associated in the foreign policy realm with two of the most catastrophic decisions in decades is lecturing the US about ‘grand strategy’. Got it.”
THE WHITE HOUSE
POINTS OFF FOR TARDINESS — “Deadlines burn Biden,” by Chris Cadelago and Natasha Korecki: “Until last week, Biden’s Afghanistan policy had been defined as a rigid adherence to his withdrawal deadline. And that insistence opened him up to a wave of criticism for being both shortsighted and politically motivated … Biden’s resolve seemed to recede a bit on Sunday night when, in response to two consecutive questions about his Aug. 31 deadline, he said his ‘hope’ was to ‘not have to extend’ it. …
“It wouldn’t be the first time in recent months that the White House has blown through a major deadline of its own creation: the administration missed its July 4 benchmark to vaccinate 70 percent of American adults … The president’s setbacks in Afghanistan and in corralling the coronavirus were due, in part, to intelligence failures and unanticipated variables. … Yet in close succession, they represent threats to Biden’s reputation as a steady hand with institutional wisdom that helps him to see around corners.”
VEEP ABROAD — “Kamala Harris visits Singapore to deepen ties, counter China’s influence,” Reuters/Singapore
CONGRESS
MCCARTHY’S BIG BIF DECISION — “McCarthy faces speakership test on infrastructure vote,” by Olivia Beavers: “Republicans are still waiting to receive guidance on whether the GOP leader will whip against or withhold his influential fire on the bipartisan plan. … [H]e must both ensure moderates don’t feel left out to dry and also shore up his right flank. …
“Some Republicans hope [KEVIN] MCCARTHY actively whips against the bill, whether it is tied to reconciliation or not — and they are curious if McCarthy can get all his members in line in the event of a standalone vote. Meanwhile, many centrist Republicans who say they worked with senators to craft the bipartisan legislation firmly hold that their support of the bill is contingent on Pelosi’s next move. But they also want to see if McCarthy pushes the conference against the bill.”
PANDEMIC
CRISIS MODE — “Health worker crunch pressures states battling Delta variant,” by Dan Goldberg and Alice Miranda Ollstein: “The alarming spread of new cases is draining the pool of available health workers in ways not seen since the pandemic’s winter peak, forcing officials to improvise and tear up rules dictating who cares for whom. Governors and hospital directors warn that the staffing crisis is so acute that patients, whether suffering from Covid-19, a heart attack or the effects of a car accident, can no longer expect the level of care that might have been available six weeks ago. …
“The staffing crunch is more than just a nursing shortage. Radiologists, laboratory technicians, custodial staff and food-service workers are all in short supply. Some leave because of burnout, having battled the pandemic for nearly 18 months. Some who’ve stayed need time off to care for an infected loved one.”
BEHIND THE CURTAIN — “How the U.S. vaccination drive came to rely on an army of consultants,” by WaPo’s Isaac Stanley-Becker: “Consultants say they helped save lives by supporting overextended public servants with specialized expertise. … But critics question whether such contracts improve government performance, arguing the arrangements are costly and difficult to oversee. Taxpayers have no way to know what precisely they are getting under no-bid contracts worth millions of dollars because the internal documents of private consultancies are not subject to public records laws.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
INCOMING — “Arizona’s sham ‘audit’ report due to GOP-led state Senate on Monday,” CNN
BIG LEGAL NEWS — NYT’s @ShaneGoldmacher: “NEW w/ @maggieNYT: MARC ELIAS, the Democratic lawyer is splitting with Perkins Coie, the giant law firm. Eleven partners and three counsel joining new Elias Law Group. Elias has repped the Dem party committees etc via Perkins. This is a significant shift in Dem legal world.” More details
DEPT. OF BIENNIAL HEADLINES — “Veterans are prized recruits as congressional candidates,” by AP’s Will Weissert in Norfolk, Va.: “Both parties anticipate a significant number of races where veterans will be opposing each other, using their military service as a foundation of their appeal even as they hold widely diverging views on issues.”
CENSUS DATA DIVE — “9 of 10 fastest growing districts repped by Republicans, Census data shows,” by Steve Shepard, Patterson Clark, Ming Li and Sean McMinn: “The eight congressional districts that grew the most over the past decade were all in either Texas or Florida, mostly centered around growing cities such as Dallas, Houston and Orlando. … All but one of those districts are represented by Republicans. … Because the GOP is in charge of the process in both states, these Republican incumbents are likely to find their new, smaller districts to be more hospitable than their old seats.”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
IN NEED OF HELP IN THE VOLUNTEER STATE — “Flooding in Tennessee destroys rural towns, leaving at least 21 dead, more than 20 missing,” Nashville Tennessean
HOW HENRI HIT — “Tropical Storm Henri hits Rhode Island, leaving tens of thousands without power,” Providence Journal
WHO RECALLS THE RECALLERS? — “Elder shakes up recall campaign team,” by Carla Marinucci in Oakland: “Campaign manager LOUIS BARNETT, whose appointment was announced when [LARRY] ELDER entered the gubernatorial race in July, confirmed Sunday he no longer holds that position. In his place, Elder has hired JEFFREY CORLESS, a GOP consultant who once served as political director to U.S. Senate candidate CARLY FIORINA.”
— “California recall reality: Newsom could be replaced by candidate with far fewer votes,” by L.A. Times’ Maura Dolan
— “Democrats spotlight abortion in bid to save Newsom,” by Alice Miranda Ollstein and Victoria Colliver with an Oakland dateline: “Dems and their allies are hammering the message that a GOP governor could veto abortion-rights laws, cut funding for clinics and appoint anti-abortion agency officials.”
HARSH SPOTLIGHT ON DESANTIS — “In Florida, DeSantis cut jobless aid just as virus began terrifying new wave,” by WaPo’s Yeganeh Torbati in Davenport, Fla.
MEDIAWATCH
BIG RETENTION FOR MSNBC — “Rachel Maddow has reached a new deal to stay at MSNBC,” by Insider’s Claire Atkinson: “After months of talks with a host of other networks, RACHEL MADDOW has opted to stay put thanks to a new multi-year contract that will include developing new projects with MSNBC and parent company NBCUniversal … Maddow hired super-agent Ari Emanuel to negotiate a new deal …
“The new deal will give Maddow the opportunity to develop a raft of multi-media projects, including books and movies of her choice … The news appears to be NBCUniversal News Chairman CESAR CONDE’s first major talent contract renewal at MSNBC.”
PLAYBOOKERS
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The Georgetown Institute of Politics and Public Service is announcing its fall class of fellows: Charlotte Clymer, Rory Cooper, Bob Lighthizer, Amna Nawaz, Rebecca Pearcey and Brian Stelter.
— Amanda Golden is now a news comms manager at Google. She most recently was a political reporter covering Capitol Hill and the White House for NBC News and MSNBC, and is a CNN alum.
TRANSITIONS — Jacques Petit is the new comms director for Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz). He most recently was at GMMB, and is a Biden campaign and Giffords alum. … Jason Alinsky is joining the political shop at the Progressive Turnout Project as a regional coordinator. He’s a People For the American Way and Jamie Raskin alum. … Kaylie Hanson Long is returning to Sen. Chris Murphy’s (D-Conn.) office as a senior adviser. She most recently was deputy campaign manager for Jennifer Carroll Foy’s Virginia gubernatorial campaign.
ENGAGED — David O’Brien, director of strategic comms at the National Association of Manufacturers, proposed to Laura Peavey, comms director for the House Financial Services GOP, on the Eastern Shore this weekend. The couple celebrated with a sunset cruise and plenty of champagne. Pic
— Kindred Motes, founder and managing director of KM Strategies, and Raul Caso, surgery resident at Georgetown University Hospital pursuing a career in thoracic surgery, got engaged July 23 at Tudor Place in Georgetown. The two kept the engagement a secret for a month before announcing it to family and friends on social media from Spain, where they’re spending a week celebrating. They first met at Astoria Bar after matching on Hinge. Pic
— Megan Cagle, director of comms for New American Leaders, and Robin Dutta, senior manager of market development and policy at SunPower Corporation, got engaged Friday in Old Town Alexandria, where Robin surprised Megan while they were walking along the waterfront with their dog, Frida. The couple met in 2012 at a campaign manager training hosted by the DLCC. Pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Jett Thompson, deputy chief of staff and legislative director for Rep. Stephanie Bice (R-Okla.), and Kimberly Thompson, a school meals program specialist with the D.C. government, welcomed John Edward Thompson IV on Wednesday at GW Hospital. He came in at 7 lbs, 4 oz. Pic
BIRTHWEEK (was Aug. 16): Machmud Makhmudov of the White House
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (5-0) … Reps. Scott Franklin (R-Fla.) and Kim Schrier (D-Wash.) … Stephen Miller … Axios’ Alexi McCammond … NBC’s Mike Memoli and Julie Tsirkin … Roll Call’s Niels Lesniewski … Stand Together’s Brian Walsh … Richard Chalkey … Miriam Sapiro … Bradley Singer of WME … POLITICO’s Caitlin Oprysko, Madina Touré and Kadija Jalloh … Targeted Victory’s John Hall … Finsbury Glover Hering’s Tom Nowlan … Todd Van Etten … Rob Bluey … USA Today’s Annah Backstrom Aschbrenner … Ted Newton … Jesse Connolly … Brunswick Group’s Patti Solis Doyle … ProPublica’s Craig Silverman … Ian Jefferies of the Association of American Railroads … Jenna Alsayegh of USTelecom … Bryer Davis … David Wickenden of AARP … Jessica (Jensen) Ketner … Singaporean President Halimah Yacob … former Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam … former California Gov. Pete Wilson … Queen Noor of Jordan (7-0)
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: Bumbling Biden Roughed Up by Brits Over the Weekend
Top O’ the Briefing
Biden Off the Credibility Cliff
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. My nightmares are filled with people wearing leotards.
I spent the weekend connecting with family and friends, and it was a much-needed reminder about what is really important. Not only did I avoid the news, but I also didn’t go anywhere near a television. Oh, much good Mexican food was consumed too. It was with no small amount of trepidation that I returned to the real world on Sunday night.
At the end of last week, we all learned that the British Parliament can hold the president of the United States in contempt. It was an eye-opening revelation about just how bad things were going for Joe Biden.
We were told all last year that electing Biden would mean that our allies would respect us again. I rejected the premise that they didn’t respect the United States while Trump was in office, largely because Democrats and the media insist that our friends in Europe hate us every time a Republican is in the White House.
Our friends on the other side of the Atlantic are, to put mildly, unimpressed with Biden and his administration’s handling of the withdrawal from Afghanistan. Some of them were getting a little more vocal about it these past few days.
Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair weighed in on the situation, which Rick wrote about:
British media blew up yesterday following the publication of an op-ed in a prominent think tank publication by former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who calls Joe Biden’s withdrawal from Afghanistan “imbecilic.”
Blair, a darling of the left while he was in office, says Biden’s decision to pull the troops out was not based on any grand, strategic objective, but rather “in obedience to an imbecilic political slogan about ending ‘the forever wars.’”
Blair, who was prime minister during the 9/11 crisis and subsequent invasion of Afghanistan, noted in the article that no coalition troops had died in combat over the last 18 months.
ZING!
As Rick noted, American lefties swooned over Blair for years because he never criticized Democrats. Well, that party is over.
My colleague Jennifer Oliver O’Connell at our sister site RedState wrote a post on Saturday about both Biden and the American political media getting absolutely excoriated in an opinion piece in London’s Telegraph UK. Here’s an excerpt from the source material that Jennifer highlighted:
The world appears to have woken up to an important truth this week: which is that Joe Biden is a truly terrible president. It is a shame that it took America gifting Afghanistan back to the Taliban for so many people to realise this.
To be charitable, there were perhaps two reasons why this had not become more obvious before. The first is that Joe Biden is not Donald Trump and for a lot of the planet that seems to be recommendation enough to occupy the Oval Office. A break from the Trump show appealed to an awful lot of people.
But the second reason why too few realised what the world was going to get from a Biden presidency is that the US media simply didn’t ask the questions it needed to ask. Before the election a near entirety of the American media gave up covering it and simply campaigned for the Democrat nominee.
Given the way things are going, the media’s role in getting this idiot installed in the Oval Office borders on being criminal. At a minimum, it’s a tragedy that may take decades for this country to recover from.
The Democrats and their flying monkeys in the mainstream media insisted that Joe Biden would bring some missing dignity and respect back to the presidency. Anyone who’d paid the slightest bit of attention to Biden’s political career knew how laughable that was. He was a hot-headed spaz who had very few legislative accomplishments despite being in the Senate for decades. They were selling a fictitious, non-existent version of Biden.
After just seven months of Biden’s reign of error, our enemies are laughing at us and our allies are condemning the administration’s ineptitude.
It’s frightening to think of how much damage the puppet president’s handlers can do between now and next year’s midterm elections.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
Biden Addresses Afghanistan and Tropical Storm Henri, Says the August 31 Deadline May Be Extended
[WATCH] Biden Addresses the Nation on Afghanistan, Tropical Storm Henri
Secretary Austin and General Milley Must Step Aside
[WATCH] How Joe Biden’s Wokeness Caused the Catastrophe in Afghanistan
Massive Unrest as Australia Adopts China’s Authoritarian ‘COVID-Zero’ Approach
Secretary Austin and General Milley Must Step Aside
Kate’s Kids: The Consequences of Gov. Brown’s Dumbing Down of Education Will Be Devastating
Party First, Country Last: Biden & Harris Still Plan to Campaign for Governor Newsom
EVERYTHING’S FINE. Does Joe Biden Even Know What’s Going On? Watch SecState Blinken Refuse to Say
Former British PM Tony Blair Says Biden’s Withdrawal From Afghanistan Is ‘Imbecilic’
FDA Set to Give Full Approval of Vaccine as States Contemplate Requirements and Restrictions
Taliban Sets Woman on Fire for ‘Bad Cooking’
VodkaPundit: Fact-Checking Biden’s Address: Lies, Damned Lies, and the White House Teleprompter
SecDef Austin Contradicts Biden Again, Administration Issues Empty Threat at the Taliban
Has Biden Built ISIS Back Better?
Trapped in Kabul, American Mom Describes Horrors and Begs Biden for Help
Minneapolis City Council Approves Ballot Language That Would Eliminate the Police Department
Afghanistan’s Armed Resistance to the Taliban Enjoys First Successes
Biden’s RealClearPolitics Poll Average Underwater for the First Time
This Ridiculous Headline Proves the New York Times Knows Nothing About Anything
Democrats Panic and Launch Racist Attack on Larry Elder as Newsom’s Doom Draws Near
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: Save the Military By Starting with a Woke Purge
With That Staggering Figure, How Could You Not Question the 2020 Mail-In Voting Process
Barbra Streisand Spouts off About the Newsom Recall
Ted Cruz Rips Schumer Apart for Cringeworthy Dance With Stephen Colbert
Kira: Fox News Rescues Afghan Media Assistants and Their Families
End To License Fees Boosts South Carolina Carry Applications
Phoenix Man Takes On Four Home Invaders.. And Wins
COVID Causing Gun Companies To Pull Out Of NRA Meeting?
That’s rich. China: The WHO needs to investigate this American lab in Maryland
Body count outside Kabul airport rises. Again
Elon Musk introduces Tesla Bot: ‘In the future, physical work will be a choice’
VIP
[VIDEO] Kruiser’s ‘Beyond the Briefing’—Apocalypse Please!
VodkaPundit, Part Deux: There Must Be …Five… Ways to Leave Your Office
The Kruiser Kabana Episode 144: ‘Republicans Pounce!’ Edition
Appeals Court Rules on Trump’s ‘Remain in Mexico’ Policy
Kamala Harris Comments on Afghanistan, Cackles, and Proves She’s a Moral Hologram
Weekly Good News Round-Up! AI Dreaming, Meme Farming, and Hurricane Vacations
Adventures in Maskless-ness: Van Gogh Immersive Experience Edition
Leftist Journo: Taliban and al-Qaeda Combined Aren’t as Big a Threat as Trump and His Supporters
The Unvarnished Truth About the Pandemic From a Harvard Epidemiologist
The Latest News on COVID-19’s Effects on Vaccinated Americans Is Much Better Than We’re Being Told
In Losing Control of Afghanistan, Biden May Lose His Domestic Agenda
GOLD How Are Those Mean Tweets Looking Now?
Around the Interwebz
How to Save a Historical House While (Technically) Living Rent-Free
Catholic New Yorker continues quest for accountability 20 years after 9/11
The Most and Least Expensive Cities for Pizza in the U.S.
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
I spend a lot of time on my imaginary yacht lately.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Racing Against the Clock
President Biden suggests the U.S. might need to stay in Afghanistan longer than he’d thought to complete the necessary evacuations.
The Dispatch Staff | 1 |
Happy Monday! We’ll take “should have deleted those old podcast episodes” for $800, Mike.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The strongest tropical storm to make landfall in New England in more than 30 years battered the northeast United States Sunday, leaving thousands of homes without power. Coastal areas experienced gusts reaching 78 miles per hour, sustained winds of 57 miles per hour, and heavy rainfall. The governors of Connecticut, Rhode Island, and New York declared states of emergency in anticipation of the storm.
- President Joe Biden said Sunday that he may extend his administration’s August 31 deadline for removing the last U.S. troops from Afghanistan, as tens of thousands of Americans and Afghan allies remain behind Taliban lines in need of evacuation. Biden added that 28,000 people have been evacuated from the country over the last week. At least seven Afghans, including a 2-year-old child, were killed in a stampede over the weekend as thousands of evacuees massed at Hamid Karzai International Airport, the British military said Sunday.
- Countries across the Middle East and Europe will now accept evacuees from Afghanistan in transit after Qatar’s al-Udeid air base reached maximum capacity, according to the State Department. Eighteen commercial aircraft will arrive in Kabul in the coming days to aid in the evacuation effort, the Pentagon said Sunday.
- The State Department imposed additional sanctions over the weekend on a handful of Russian entities involved in the construction of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, but critics argue they are far from enough to stop the project, which Russian President Vladimir Putin said Friday is just 15 kilometers from completion. During a visit to Kyiv, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said additional sanctions against Russia could be in play if it tries to use the pipeline “as a weapon” against Ukraine.
- Groups representing landlords and real-estate agents have filed paperwork asking the Supreme Court to scrap the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s August 3 eviction moratorium. Chief Justice John Roberts ordered the government to respond by noon today.
- The Biden administration has appealed to the Supreme Court a Texas federal judge’s ruling earlier this month that required the government to reinstate the Trump administration’s Migrant Protection Protocols, under which migrants seeking asylum in the U.S. were obliged to remain in Mexico pending their asylum hearing. Biden had suspended the program, which the Trump administration had created in 2018, on his first day in office.
- Record-breaking flash floods in middle Tennessee Sunday left at least 22 people dead as of Sunday night. 26 more remain missing, according to local authorities.
The Latest on Afghanistan Evacuations
Having canceled a planned trip to Delaware over the weekend, President Biden spoke from the White House’s Roosevelt Room on Sunday. There, he updated reporters on two storms: A literal one—Henri—which had just made landfall in Rhode Island a few hours earlier, and a political one—Afghanistan—which has been roiling his administration for the better part of two weeks.
“My job is to make judgments no one else can or will make,” he said, responding to a question about his lagging approval numbers. “I made them. I’m convinced I’m absolutely correct in not deciding to send more young women and men to war, for a war that, in fact, is no longer warranted. … I think that history is going to record this was the logical, rational, and right decision to make.”
History will render its judgment in due time, but the federal government’s immediate responsibility—because of that decision Biden made—is to complete the evacuation of tens of thousands of Americans and Afghan allies before the Taliban decides to stop playing nice (which, according to some reports, it already has). All in all, Biden claimed his administration had—as of Sunday morning—evacuated just shy of 28,000 people in the week or so since Kabul fell, including about 11,000 in one 36-hour period. National security adviser Jake Sullivan said Sunday he couldn’t provide the “precise number” of Americans who remain in the country, but added he believes it to be “several thousand.”
Biden said the White House’s “hope” is to have everyone out by his self-imposed August 31 deadline, but that there are “discussions going on among us and the military about extending.”
Worth Your Time
- Dexter Filkins’ articles on Afghanistan are always worth your time. “In recent weeks, the United States’ hasty, ill-planned withdrawal did the Taliban one last favor,” he writes in The New Yorker. “By bringing chaos to the capital and abandoning those who had risked their lives to aid the U.S., it surely inspired many Afghans to wish for someone to restore order. … As the Biden Administration recklessly departed Afghanistan, it left behind the chance of a deeper calamity, not just in the country but in the region. The President’s embarrassing speech last week, in which he blamed the debacle on everyone but himself, serves as a fitting end to America’s twenty-year endeavor. As Biden withdrew his forces, he urged Afghans to fight for their country’s future. It seems alarmingly possible that they will have to.”
- Mike Pompeo has, for good reason, been exceedingly critical of the Biden administration’s handling of the United States’ Afghanistan withdrawal. What he hasn’t mentioned is that the Biden administration is more or less following the blueprint he mapped out as secretary of state. In a piece for Slate, William Saletan details Pompeo’s flip-flop on the subject. “The Biden administration misjudged how quickly the government would fall, and Biden misled Americans about what could happen. But nobody has lied more about the Afghan collapse than Pompeo,” he writes. “A year ago, in Pompeo’s words, the Taliban was represented by a ‘gentleman,’ was ‘working diligently to reduce violence,’ and was ‘sincere in wanting what’s good for the Afghan people.’ Now he calls the Taliban ‘butchers.’ ‘We never trusted them,’ he insists. ‘We always knew that what they were telling us was almost certainly a lie.’”
- The current spike of COVID cases driven by the Delta variant is driving a hard truth home for many: It simply doesn’t seem likely we’ll ever truly put this disease behind us the way we did, for instance, SARS. So what happens as COVID slowly transitions from pandemic to endemic—a disease that’s always with us, but for which risk has fallen low enough through natural or vaccine immunity that we largely simply tolerate it? While cautioning that we’re not there yet—many people still lack any immunity to COVID whatsoever—The Atlantic’s Sarah Zhang offers some insights into what the growing pains of that transition are likely to be. “When everyone has some immunity, a COVID-19 diagnosis becomes as routine as diagnosis of strep or flu—not good news, but not a reason for particular fear or embarrassment either,” she writes. “That means unlearning a year of messaging that said COVID-19 was not just a flu. If the confusion around the CDC dropping mask recommendations for the vaccinated earlier this summer is any indication, this transition to endemicity might be psychologically rocky. Reopening felt too fast for some, too slow for others.”
Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- In addition to his remarks on Afghanistan yesterday, President Biden addressed reporters on Friday as well. Alec and Khaya took him to task in a Dispatch Fact Check over his false claims that al-Qaeda is “gone” from the country and that no Americans have been unable to get to the airport.
- In his Sunday French Press, David contemplates a hard question: In the wake of our ignominious scramble out of Afghanistan, how should we view the sacrifices of the Americans who fought and died in service of a cause we now seem to be turning away from? Those men and women, he argues, did not sacrifice in vain. “A virtuous sacrifice is transcendent. It’s an expression of duty and faith that has enduring power, and that power is often not fully perceived within our lifetimes. … [Afghanistan] tells the story of men and women who loved each other and died for each other. It tells the story of people who chose to leave hearth and home and place themselves in harm’s way to confront a terrible evil. It also tells the story, time and again, of American men and women who died to protect Afghan men and women.”
- Meanwhile, Thomas Joscelyn’s Friday Vital Interests(🔒) was a little more glum, taking President Biden to task for his over-cheerful proclamations that al-Qaeda is gone from Afghanistan. “Al-Qaeda is likely in Kabul right now, according to two U.S. counterterrorism officials,” he writes. “They point to the large footprint of the Haqqani Network, an integral part of the Taliban, inside the Afghan capital. As I’ve stressed for years, the Haqqanis are so close to al-Qaeda that they are often indistinguishable … The Haqqanis and al-Qaeda now share their victory in the Afghan War as well.”
- We’ve leaned on Tom’s expertise a lot over the last few weeks, for very good reason—there aren’t many who know the war in Afghanistan better. On Friday, he joined David and Steve on the Dispatch Podcast to discuss the timing of the administration’s evacuation of Kabul, the intelligence failures that caught the U.S. with its pants down as the Taliban swept in, and the state of the fragmented Afghan military.
- In a piece for the website, James Capretta and Kieran Allsop look into the status of our vaccine supply and how approving a third shot for all eligible Americans will make it harder for us to donate doses to countries in need.
- Joe Biden’s approval is below 50 percent, and the disastrous Afghan withdrawal isn’t going to make things better. Chris Stirewalt writes about what that means for the midterm elections.
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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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Joe Biden’s Humiliation Crescendos After Taliban Release Statement
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
August 23, 2021 THE LATEST Daily scenes of chaos at the Kabul airport show how badly many Afghans want to leave the country of their birth rather than stay under the Taliban’s rule. Many of these refugees will have a hard time gaining entry to the U.S. thanks to an ongoing campaign of xenophobia. And white Protestant evangelicals especially are increasingly unwilling to offer shelter to those in need, writes Anthea Butler.
“This hardening of hearts was encouraged by the Trump administration,” Butler writes. And yes, it is a “contradiction to the Bible’s admonition in Matthew 25 to welcome the stranger. Instead, a popular Republican strategy has been to make sure immigrants are seen as the enemy. ”
Read Anthea Butler’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Monday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES The war on masks is rapidly turning violent. Read More He literally had an album called “Age Ain’t Nothing But a Number.” Read More Nikki Haley tried to change the subject. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC
On Wednesday, September 8th, MSNBC Films and Peacock will present “Memory Box: Echoes of 9/11,” a Yard 44 and NBC News Studios production. The new feature documentary tells the story of September 11th through personal recollections recorded from a video booth in the wake of 9/11 that have never been shown on film. 20 years later, the same eyewitnesses return to the booth to reflect upon the past two decades.
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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 MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Afghanistan continues to dominate headlines in the U.S. and around the globe, while Tropical Storm Henri causes havoc after making landfall Sunday. Plus a look at how London is getting a taste for American treats.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Monday morning. As chaotic scenes from Afghanistan play on TV screens across the world, President Joe Biden said Sunday that the U.S. was considering extending evacuation efforts beyond his Aug. 31 deadline for U.S. forces to complete their withdrawal.
Speaking to reporters at the White House, Biden said there were discussions “among us and the military about extending,” while he defended the administration’s handling of the war’s final days.
“Our hope is that we will not have to extend,” he said.
Biden pointed to new numbers of evacuees as a contrast to scenes at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, where thousands of people remain to be airlifted out of the country after the Taliban seized control of the country.
Biden said the U.S. evacuated about 11,000 people in 30 hours over the weekend. He said about 28,000 U.S. citizens, allies and Afghans have been secured since the Taliban’s takeover of Kabul on Aug. 15, adding that 33,000 people have been transported since July.
“We see no reason why this tempo will not be kept up,” he said, referring to the pace of evacuations over the weekend.
But as his handling of the withdrawal has come under criticism from foreign allies and officials in both parties, Biden claimed that there was no way it could have gone any more smoothly.
Also on this story:
Monday’s Top Stories
More than 1,000 flights were canceled Sunday as the storm made landfall near Rhode Island. Meanwhile, at least 21 people are dead and 20 are missing after heavy rain pounded Tennessee. The House makes an early return Monday as Democratic leaders seek to string together the votes to advance President Joe Biden’s $3.5 trillion economic package. Meanwhile in Texas, Republicans are renewing efforts to advance a voting bill. California’s embattled Democratic governor is betting his political life on turning next month’s recall election into a referendum on some of the nation’s strictest mandates. OPINION The teacher is now viewed by a small, loud contingent not as a public servant but as a public enemy, writes Anne Lutz Fernandez, a high school English teacher. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
A pandemic-tightened labor market has given willing and able workers more of an upper hand with their employers for the first time in generations. Economists are less convinced. Shopping
Portable AC units are easier to install than traditional window AC units. Though they’re typically pricier, we found some affordable options. One Fun Thing
The United Kingdom is proud of its long tradition of making chocolate and other sweet treats. But now candy stores are popping up on one of London’s busiest shopping streets, and they’re filled with sweets that will look familiar to any American.
Read more about it here.
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 30 Rockefeller Plaza New York, NY 10112 View in browser | Unsubscribe | Manage Subscription | Contact | Privacy |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Biden’s silver lining amid poll slide — Time is still on his side
The latest NBC News poll is a rough one for President Biden and his party seven months into his presidency.
Just 25 percent of adults approve of Biden’s handling of Afghanistan; his handling of the coronavirus is down 16 points from April; his handling of the economy is down 5 points; and his party holds just a 1-point advantage in congressional preference – which, historically, has represented a tough political environment for the Democratic Party.
But here’s the good news for Biden: Because much of the erosion in the poll is due to Covid – and not Afghanistan – Biden has time to get more Americans vaccinated, to get past Delta, and to get the country closer to the place he thought it would be this summer.
Independence from the coronavirus.
Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
Check out these numbers in the poll: 37 percent of respondents say the worst is behind us when it comes to the coronavirus, while 42 percent say the worst is yet to come.
That’s a significant reversal from April, when 61 percent of Americans said the worst was behind us, versus 19 percent who said the worst was yet to come.
And on the economy, just 24 percent describe the current state as excellent or good.
“It is the domestic storm, Covid’s Delta wave, that is causing more difficulties at this stage here at home and for President Biden,” said NBC poll co-pollster Jeff Horwitt (D).
Bill McInturff, the GOP half of the poll, agrees: “The best way to understand this poll is to forget Afghanistan.”
We’ve said it before, and we’ll say it again: How Covid goes, so goes the Biden presidency.
And right now, Covid isn’t going so great. But that has the potential to change three to six months from now – just as we begin heading into the 2022 midterms.
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Independents sour on Biden
Also, if you want to know WHERE the erosion from Biden is coming from in our poll, it’s coming from independents, who were crucial to his coalition in the 2020 election.
- Biden’s job rating among independents in April: 61 percent
- Biden’s job rating among independents now: 46 percent
- Biden’s Covid handling among independents in April: 81 percent
- Biden’s Covid handling among independents now: 52 percent
- Biden’s economic handling among independents in April: 60 percent
- Biden’s economic handling among independents now: 45 percent
- Congressional preference among independents in April: D+14
- Congressional preference among independents now: R+1
In our new poll, the Democrats have remained steadily behind Biden. It’s independents who have moved.
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What have you done for me lately?
And here’s something else Biden and the Dems have to fix: The public isn’t giving them credit for getting stuff done.
And on the one big Biden accomplishment so far – the Covid relief legislation – just a third of Americans say it’s helping the economy or will help it in the future.
From our poll: 40 percent say Biden has accomplished either a great deal or a fair amount as president, while 58 percent disagree.
And 35 percent of Americans say that the Covid relief legislation that was passed in March is helping to improve the economy or will do so in the future, versus 38 percent who believe it won’t help or will hurt the economy; 27 percent have no opinion or are unsure.
So as the House returns this week to begin advancing a $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill, these poll numbers drive home the message that Democrats need some points on the board.
ASAP.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: Full FDA approval for Pfizer on the way?
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
Approximately 10,400: The number of people the Biden White House says U.S. military evacuated from Kabul (plus another about 5,900 evacuated by coalition flights) on Sunday.
21: The number of people who have died in Tennessee after devastating flooding there.
37,798,864: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 315,638 since Friday morning.)
632,038: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 2,155 since Friday morning).
362,657,771: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 3,034,391 since Friday morning.)
51.5 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
62 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?
President Biden says the U.S. may have to extend its Afghanistan withdrawal deadline depending on how evacuations go.
A new cable obtained by NBC News shows that local staff members at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul are “deeply disheartened” by U.S. evacuation efforts and have expressed a sense of betrayal and distrust in the U.S. government.
Nine moderate Democrats make their pitch in the Washington Post for passing bipartisan immigration reform before handling reconciliation, as House Democrats return to work on the Democrat-led reconciliation plan.
Former President Donald Trump was booed at a rally Saturday in Alabama after he told supporters they should get vaccinated.
The Texas House could pass voting restrictions within days after Democrats’ efforts to stave off the Republican-backed changes fell apart last week.
Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. and his wife, Jacqueline, are hospitalized with Covid, but their family says they’re responding positively to treatment.
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50.) CBS
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51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Kamala Harris has been kept away from cameras over the past week. We saw her briefly standing behind her boss, masked up like she was a lieutenant in COBRA. But other than that, she’s been kept away f … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
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57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
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58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Monday, Aug. 23, and we’re covering downpours from the Mid-South to New England, pockets of resistance in Afghanistan, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWTennessee Floods At least 21 people were killed, with dozens missing, after flash floods hit areas west of Nashville, Tennessee. Some parts of the region saw more than 15 inches of rain Saturday morning, with officials in rural areas saying it was the worst flooding in three decades. See footage from the aftermath here. Separately, more than 50 million people were under a severe weather warning yesterday, waiting out Tropical Storm Henri as it passed over New England. The system, which reached Category 1 hurricane status before weakening, made landfall yesterday afternoon along Rhode Island. Had it sustained intensity, it would’ve marked New England’s first direct hurricane landfall in three decades. New York City saw its wettest hour on record, with 1.94 inches falling between 10 and 11 pm Saturday. At least 140,000 households lost power by yesterday afternoon. See photos of the impact here. The storm is expected to take a sharp 90-degree bend, moving across Massachusetts, Maine, and Newfoundland by Tuesday. See the trajectory here. Afghan ResistanceAnti-Taliban fighters drove the militant group from three districts over the weekend, the most significant armed challenge to the group’s reign since seizing control of the country last weekend. The districts sit in the Panjshir Valley, the main bastion of resistance during previous Taliban rule from 1996 to 2001, with fighters led by the former vice president, Amrullah Saleh. Located in a relatively isolated pocket north of Kabul (see map), analysts say the resistance needs to carve a line to neighboring countries, likely Tajikistan to the north, in order to establish supply routes. In Kabul, at least seven people were killed yesterday, crushed by panicked crowds attempting to gain entrance to the Kabul airport—see footage from the scene here (warning: sensitive content). The Biden administration said it would enlist at least 18 commercial airliners from six airlines to assist in the evacuation efforts. It’s the third time in history the US government has utilized the Civil Reserve Air Fleet, established in the wake of World War II. The aircraft will not fly into Kabul but focus on evacuees who’ve been transported to intermediate locations. Pentagon officials said 17,000 people, including 2,500 Americans, had been evacuated over the past week. It is unclear how many Americans remain, though early estimates suggested between 10,000 and 15,000 Americans were on the ground when the Taliban seized control. Recovery in HaitiThe death toll from an earthquake that rocked Haiti a week ago rose to more than 2,200, according to reports over the weekend. Officials estimate almost 12,300 people are injured, with more than 50,000 houses destroyed. The recovery effort has been hampered by challenges in getting aid to victims. The quake was stronger than the 7.0-magnitude strike that devasted Haiti in 2010, though officials have said the country had not yet recovered from the previous disaster. Haiti is particularly prone to earthquakes, sitting near the intersection of the North American and the Caribbean tectonic plates. See photos of the rescue and recovery efforts here (paywall, Atlantic). In partnership with Alumni VenturesYOUR VENTURE PORTFOLIO AWAITSAirbnb, Snowflake, DoorDash—2020’s multibillion-dollar IPOs. You know the names, but chances are you couldn’t invest early when they were private and venture-backed. Are you happy with your venture portfolio? If not, get to know Alumni Ventures. Traditional VC funds largely cater to institutions, but Alumni Ventures has been making venture investing accessible to accredited investors like you since 2015. Through Alumni Ventures, you can invest alongside established VC firms in the next generation of great ventures. With just one investment, you can build a large and diversified venture portfolio. Are you ready to consider venture capital? See how Alumni Ventures has made investing smartly in this important asset class easier than ever. Sign up to learn more. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & Culture> Mike Richards steps down just nine days after being named new host of “Jeopardy!” amid backlash over comments he made as a former podcast host (More) > Don Everly, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer and one-half of pioneering sibling duo The Everly Brothers, dies at 84 (More) > NBA releases full regular-season schedule for 2021-22 season, its 75th anniversary (More) | American sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson finishes last in first 100-meter race after missing Olympics due to substance ban; Jamaican women sweep podium (More) Science & Technology> Study pinpoints a key amino acid change facilitating the increased transmissibility of the coronavirus delta variant (More) > Researchers demonstrate an implantable biometric chip capable of monitoring real-time health signals (More) > Breast milk guards against a common form of bacterial disease in infants, study suggests; oligosaccharides, a type of sugar found in human milk, helps block group B Streptococcus bacteria (More) Business & MarketsBrought to you by The Ascent > General Motors to recall over 70,000 Bolt electric vehicles due to potentially defective battery modules costing the company $1B (More) > The Topps Co. terminates its proposed special purpose acquisition company merger valuing company at $1.3B after Major League Baseball ends its 70-year-old trading card deal in favor of Fanatics (More) > Apple postpones its return to corporate offices from October until January at the earliest due to pandemic cases (More) From our partners: 0% APR is 100% insane. This card offers 0% APR for 18 months on balance transfers. And it also gives you the chance to rake in crazy cash back deals—with no annual fee. Politics & World Affairs> US vaccination rate rises in response to a surge in cases; roughly 1 million shots per day were administered Thursday through Sunday, with average daily shots having doubled since late July (More) > California’s Caldor Fire grows to more than 100,000 acres, at 5% containment (More) | Dixie Fire passes 720,000 acres consumed (More) | Greenwood Fire in northeastern Minnesota grows to 9,000 acres (More) > New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) set for last day in office ahead of Aug. 24 resignation; Cuomo stepped down among a number of sexual misconduct allegations (More) SIMPLIFY INVESTING IN PRE-IPO STARTUPSIn partnership with Alumni Ventures Alumni Ventures is a network-powered VC firm that helps thousands of accredited individuals invest in competitive private venture investments. With Alumni Ventures, you’ll be investing in startups alongside other established VC firms, like Sequoia, Lightspeed, Greylock, and others. If you’re an accredited investor missing out on the venture opportunity, let Alumni Ventures help. Sign up to learn more. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAGo inside the world’s most popular Airbnb. Texas company launches on-demand emergency drone service. Captivating high-speed skateboarding in Switzerland. (via YouTube) The National Zoo’s newest giant panda celebrates his first birthday. Americans’ belief in aliens is growing. There’s a fleet of electric submarines mapping the seafloor. Sculpture gardens are growing off the Mediterranean coast. Wally the walrus gets a pontoon. Clickbait: Ice worms emerge from Pacific Northwest glaciers. Historybook: Actor River Phoenix born (1970); Salad Bowl strike begins; largest farmworker strike in US history (1970); Kobe Bryant born (1978); HBD 12-time Olympic swimming medalist Natalie Coughlin (1982); World Wide Web opens to the public (1991). “Without goals, training has no direction.” – Natalie Coughlin Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com. Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here! |
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
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70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
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72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
It’s confirmed the vice president was the last person in the room before Biden made the decision
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TOP STORIES:
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Kamala BUSTED! The Past Has Come Back To Haunt Her
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Taliban Releases Infuriating Photo Mocking Soldiers
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Supreme Court Makes Shocking Sudden Decision
- Leader Calls For Biden To Be Court-Martialed
- Biden Has No More Places To Hide, It’s OVER For Him
- It May Now Be A Crime To Watch Mike Lindell
- Trump To Drop Big News At Alabama Rally Today
- Biden Caught In Massive Bold Faced Lie
- Pentagon Confirms The Worst About Americans Trapped In Afghanistan
- Biden Faces Devastating News…This Is The Beginning Of His End
- Biden’s Family Sounded Alarm About His Health…
- Taliban Patrolling Streets of Kabul in US Military Uniforms and Left Behind Body Armor
- Bin Laden Sent Damning Warning About Biden That’s Coming True Now
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IN DEPTH:
- Biden urges Taliban to provide for ‘well being’ of Afghans
- Biden to discuss Afghanistan evacuations during Sunday address to nation
- Taliban Terrorists Take 20 Children Hostage — Give Fathers 4 Hours to Surrender 59 mins
- Growing political roadblock vs. big spender Joe Biden 3 hours
- China Passes 3‑Child Policy into Law, Hoping to Reverse Decline 3 hours
- Only 25% Approve of Biden’s Handling of Afghanistan 3 hours
- The Strange Saga Of An AP Article Trying To Condemn Gov. DeSantis For Pushing COVID-19 Treatments 4 hours
- Manny Pacquiao’s future: Politics, cryptos, hydrogen water after Ugás fight 4 hours
- Dem centrists say DCCC is threatening to withhold fundraising if they oppose Biden priority 4 hours
- Batman Actor Michael Keaton Talks ‘Challenge’ of Doing Action Movies 4 hours
- Gretchen Whitmer Hates ‘Out-of-State Interest’ Money, Unless It’s Spent To Help Her — Washington Free Beacon 4 hours
- Carrie Ann Inaba Leaves ‘The Talk’ After 3 Seasons 4 hours
- Britney Spears’ dogs taken away from her before ‘battery’ incident 4 hours
- We Love NYC concert officially canceled as Henri batters Big Apple 4 hours
- Healthcare systems wary of instituting COVID-19 vaccine mandate over fears of losing staff 4 hours
- US general tells British special forces: Stop rescuing people in Kabul, you’re making us look bad 4 hours
- NY Times: Biden’s competency, empathy and honesty are all being tested by Afghanistan 4 hours
- Dozens of Afghan Air Force aircraft flown out of Afghanistan 4 hours
- The Fall of Kabul Was Not the Same As the Fall of Saigon 4 hours
- What Will China Do In Afghanistan? 4 hours
- Milley and Austin Should Resign | National Review 4 hours
- China and Russia Won’t Like the Marine Corps’ New Navy-Killer Missiles 4 hours
- Texas counties that requested disaster aid for border crisis haven’t got it, officials say 4 hours
- Watch Live: ‘Free Afghanistan’ Protesters Gather in D.C. to Demand Action from Biden 4 hours
- Protesters in France demonstrate against COVID pass for sixth weekend 4 hours
- Pennsylvania GOP senators’ internal battle over imperiled forensic election audit goes public 4 hours
- Veterans Affairs Department botches drug return program, resulting in $14.6 million in losses 4 hours
- Biden Admin Orders U.S. Commercial Airlines Assist in Airlift of U.S. Citizens and Afghans 4 hours
- American Citizens Physically Harmed by Taliban, Pentagon Confirms 4 hours
- Where does the Taliban get its money and who’s funding the militant group in Afghanistan? 4 hours
- Biden lies through his teeth, fails to fess up to Afghanistan shambles for third time 4 hours
- Tapering Monetary Policy to Be Dominant Theme for Fed Officials in Week Ahead 4 hours
- After Afghan Debacle, Stop the Nation-Building Crusades Once and for All 4 hours
- White House Doctors the ‘Read out’ of Joe Biden’s Call to France’s Emmanuel Macron to Make It Look Better Than It Was 4
- Vital Words on Freedom and Liberty in a Threatening Era 4 hours
- Pink Floyd rocker Roger Waters engaged for fifth time at age 77 4 hours
- Turning Points Abroad and at Home 4 hours
- Ex-NFL RB Clinton Portis Owes About $150K In Child Support; Court Orders Arrest 5 hours
- Republicans optimistic Afghanistan chaos will win them Senate races in Arizona, Georgia, and New Hampshire 5 hours
- Oregon, Oregon State Become First To Require Vaccinations 5 hours
- Sha’Carri Richardson after last-place return: ‘Talk all the s— you want. Because I’m here to stay.’ 5 hours
- Aaron Rodgers ‘definitely would’ve’ taken the ‘Jeopardy!’ job, which has since reopened 5 hours
- NYC councilman says vaccine ID is important to prevent fraud, but voter ID is ‘civil rights violation’ 5 hours
- BREAKING: Trump blasts Biden over ‘total surrender’ in Afghanistan at massive Alabama rally 5 hours
- Tracking Henri: Hurricane, Tropical Storm Warnings Issued Throughout Tri-State Area 5 hours
- Saudi Wealth Fund Buys 30% Stake in Supercar Maker Pagani 5 hours
- Industry Experts Say QR Codes Replacing Restaurant Menus Isn’t a Fad 5 hours
- Inside Afghanistan’s Cryptocurrency Underground 5 hours
- Exclusive – Christian Aid Group Asks Corporations to Drop Beijing Olympics
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
August 23, 2021
Welcome to the Monday edition of Internet Insider, where we unspool threads of online misinformation—one dumb conspiracy at a time…
ONE DUMB CONSPIRACY Conspiracy theorists say Capitol ‘bomb’ suspect was part of a false flag Conspiracy theorists reacted to the arrest of a man making threats near the Capitol in Washington, D.C. last week by claiming that the incident was nothing more than a “false flag.”
The suspect, 49-year-old Floyd Ray Roseberry, parked his truck outside of the Library of Congress last week and told responding police officers that he was armed with a bomb.
Nearby buildings were quickly evacuated as police began negotiations that would finally end the standoff nearly five hours later.
Roseberry, a native of North Carolina, was seen by witnesses tossing dollar bills out of his vehicle while streaming the incident to his personal Facebook page. The video, which also showed Roseberry referring to himself as a “patriot” while criticizing President Joe Biden, was later taken down by Facebook.
Roseberry reportedly also said that the “revolution is on” before telling Biden that the “South is coming for you.”
NBC reporter Tom Lynch spoke with Roseberry’s wife who claimed that her husband, who voted for the first time ever in 2016 for former President Donald Trump, had been upset about the 2020 presidential election. “In a phone call, Roseberry’s wife says her husband recently struggled with mental health issues and recently changed medication,” Lynch wrote. While many viewed the troubling situation for what it was—a man with purported mental health issues who had likely fallen victim to conspiracy theories about the 2020 election—right-wing conspiracy theorists instead saw an insidious plot to frame them. The term false flag, which usually refers to a government-backed act of terrorism designed to frame a political foe, almost immediately began trending on Twitter.
In the minds of the far-right, any incident that reflects upon its members poorly, including the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, is almost always deemed a clandestine government provocation.
The column continues below.
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In many tweets on Thursday and Friday, people claimed that Biden had authorized a false flag event to divert attention away from the Taliban’s recent takeover of Afghanistan.
Another user said the incident had the “FBI written all over it” because he believed Roseberry was trying too hard to sound like he was from the South.
Over at the conspiratorial blog the Gateway Pundit, an article which did not frame the incident as a false flag was bombarded by commenters who argued otherwise.
One of the top-rated comments suggested that the bomb threat was made to distract from audits in Arizona.
Conspiracy theorists have been convinced for months that audits across the country will somehow uncover proof of widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election, despite none revealing anything of the sort.
“Another FBI inspired False Flag to keep eyes off of the audit and southern border!” one commenter wrote.
Remarks on patriots.win, a forum for supporters of Trump, were similar. “Just listen to his video… his ‘southern accent’ is fake as fuck,” one user said. “He’s trying way too hard lmao. LARPing ass FBI or CIA. They even pulled out the jacked up Chevy with some mud on it for this one hahahaha. False flag budget must be getting low.”
Authorities fear that we could see a rise in such incidents, inspired by pandemic restrictions and other antigovernmental sentiments.
Regardless of what happens, conspiracy theorists will undoubtedly have made their minds up about who is to blame. Staff Writer
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Monday 08.23.21 Labor shortages may get even more dire in the US for companies that rely on international workers as visa issues and pandemic restrictions thin the candidate pool. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. American soldiers guard a wall at the Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul. Afghanistan
Chaos continues to reign at the Kabul airport in Afghanistan as tens of thousands of people remain, waiting to escape Taliban rule. Dozens of US military transport jets are expected to land there today to ferry some of the roughly 20,000 people still at the facility. The Defense Department is also mobilizing commercial airline flights to help with evacuations. One thing that spurred on the new crush of people was the issuance of electronic visas to Special Immigrant Visa applicants, without names or document numbers. Some people then copied those visas electronically and sent them to others who didn’t have authorization to be at the airport. Some families are reportedly so desperate to leave, they are being split up and boarding flights to different countries.
Extreme weather
Tropical Storm Henri made landfall yesterday on the Rhode Island coast, bringing widespread power outages and damaging storm surge. The system has weakened to a tropical depression but is still delivering dangerous weather to the Northeast. In Tennessee, swift and severe flooding brought on by near-record rain has left at least 21 people dead and 20 others missing. Photos from the area show the extent of the damage, with hollowed-out houses and waterlogged roads full of destroyed vehicles. On the other coast, nine national forests in California are closed today as firefighters struggle to contain 11 large wildfires.
Coronavirus
Full US Food and Drug Administration approval of the Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine is “imminent,” according to a senior federal official. Another official said the approval could come in the next two weeks or as early as today. Pfizer’s vaccine has so far been distributed under an FDA emergency use authorization. Full approval could help businesses, schools and states enforce vaccine mandates and encourage some hesitant people to get the jab. If approval leads to higher vaccination rates — and if people remember to get booster shots — health professionals are hoping it will be enough to curb the latest worsening pandemic surge.
White House
Vice President Kamala Harris is in Southeast Asia this week, making her the highest-ranking Biden administration official to visit the continent so far. Her time in Vietnam and Singapore was supposed to be a friendly diplomatic visit to promote the White House’s message that “America is back.” However, with the dire situation in Afghanistan, things are much thornier. Now, Harris has to convince Southeast Asian nations that the US is sincere in its long-term commitment to the region and can handle relations competently. Harris will also focus on mutual priorities like economic growth, climate change and pandemic solutions. China is on the agenda as well, with a focus on regional security issues amid concerns over China’s territorial claims in the South China Sea.
Voting rights
The battle over voting rights in the US will likely heat up again this week. In Arizona, the sham “audit” report of 2.1 million ballots cast in Maricopa County in the 2020 presidential election is supposed to be delivered today to the Republican state senators who ordered it. The company conducting the so-called audit did not follow standard auditing procedures, and elections experts have said for months that results will not be credible. Meanwhile, in Texas, Democrats in the state House have ended their quorum-busting effort to freeze a restrictive voting bill. Now, Republicans are free to push ahead to pass the bill, which contains items like mail-in ballot restrictions, a drive-thru voting ban and restrictions to early voting. Looking ahead, activists plan to gather Saturday for a March on Washington to advocate for voting rights.
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Discussion: Who are TV’s ultimate design duos?
An Apple II manual signed by Steve Jobs just sold for nearly $800,000
Some great apes say ‘hello’ and ‘goodbye’ to each other during social interactions $531,545 That’s the total value of fines the Federal Aviation Administration recently proposed against 34 passengers accused of being unruly onboard flights. That brings the total fines levied against unruly passengers this year to more than $1 million. It was almost like the ‘Twilight Zone.’ You went into the gate and it was like a different world.
Antony Navarro, a former general assistant for R. Kelly. Navarro testified in federal court last week that the singer maintained a controlling environment, and associates and girlfriends had to follow what they called “Rob’s rules.” R. Kelly has pleaded not guilty to racketeering and violating the Mann Act, an anti-sex trafficking law. Brought to you by CNN Underscored The best Amazon beauty products worth adding to your cart Sick of spending more than $50 on skin care and makeup? We found 24 of the best beauty products on Amazon that are just as good as some cult favorites. You really can practice anywhere 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 |
- VIP Live on Thursday!
- When You’ve Lost the New York Times (2)
- Afghanistan as Foreign Policy Disaster
- When Boris called
- Sunday morning coming down
VIP Live on Thursday!
Posted: 22 Aug 2021 04:35 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)Please join your fellow VIPs for our next VIP Live event on Thursday evening. The event will begin at 7 p.m. Central time (5 Pacific, 8 Eastern). If you are a VIP member, you will get an email with a link to a live address where you can watch the event and submit your own comments and questions. Topic A will be Afghanistan, of course. Is this the beginning of the end for the Biden administration, as I said on a radio show last week? Or will Slow Joe ride out the storm? There is much else going on too, of course, including the multi-trillion-dollar spending blowout the Democrats are trying to shove through before they lose their majorities next November. We hope. Anyway, it should be an interesting show. If you are not already a VIP member, you can become one by clicking on the box in the upper right portion of our sidebar. Membership costs $4.80 per month or $48 per year, and gives you access to Power Line Live events, as well as other occasional benefits like videos of Steve’s lectures. You will eliminate most ads on our site. And, most important, by becoming a VIP you support our work. The URL to become a VIP is now: https://subscriptions.powerlineblog.com So if you are a VIP, please tune in Thursday at 7:00 p.m. Central. If you aren’t, please consider subscribing.
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When You’ve Lost the New York Times (2)
Posted: 22 Aug 2021 08:46 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)Further to Paul’s post yesterday on mounting criticism of Biden in the house organ of the Democratic Party (commonly known as the New York Times), today the Times has published what amounts to a four-alarm fire memo to Democrats that Biden needs to get his act together, or be cut loose:
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Afghanistan as Foreign Policy Disaster
Posted: 22 Aug 2021 07:57 AM PDT (John Hinderaker)British leaders continue to blast Joe Biden for his incompetent conduct of the withdrawal from Afghanistan. The London Times reports:
Imbecilic is a strong word, but what is significant here is the perceived effect on future relations with the U.K.:
Frustration with the Biden administration is obviously building:
Unfortunately, it appears likely that Biden’s botched skedaddle from Afghanistan will haunt U.S. foreign policy for years to come. STEVE adds: Since liberals like recycling, let’s bring up something Henry Kissinger said of Jimmy Carter in 1980 that applies fully to President Biden just now:
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When Boris called
Posted: 22 Aug 2021 07:29 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)In his August 20 Wall Street Journal Best of the Web column James Freeman provides a useful roundup of stories on the unfolding catastrophe in Kabul. I haven’t seen elsewhere one point he makes. “The speed of the collapse has been particularly shocking to those who made the mistake of crediting the words of the U.S. president,” he writes, quoting Alberto Nardelli’s Bloomberg story:
Freeman comments: “No wonder Mr. Biden wasn’t eager to pick up the phone when Mr. Johnson called this week.”
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Sunday morning coming down
Posted: 22 Aug 2021 06:11 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)After the week that was, I thought it might be time for another installment of this series to take a break from the news in search of lost time and placid thoughts. Yesterday Sharon Lee Myers — better known as Jackie DeShannon — celebrated her 80th birthday. I want to seize on the occasion to take a look back at a few highlights of her career. Jackie made a mark as an incredibly talented singer/songwriter well before the singer/songwriter phenomenon. Her sultry beauty didn’t hurt a bit, but it may have taken some of us down the wrong path in getting a handle on her gifts. She seems to have written, recorded, or played with virtually everyone. She was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2010. Terry Gross interviewed her at the time for NPR (transcript and audio posted here). Marc Myers interviewed Jackie for the Wall Street Journal in 2013 (here, buried in the Journal’s Real Estate section), and profiled Jackie in this 2018 Jazzwax post (with videos). I learn from Myers that she has written more than 600 songs. Even the briefest summary of DeShannon’s career is full of surprise and delight. I recommend Chris Kieft’s under the video of “Dream Boy” or, as always, Allmusic’s here. Jackie signed to Liberty Records as a teenager in 1960. By 1964 she was touring as the opening act for the Beatles. Her first (modest) chart success with Liberty came with the Sonny Bono/Jack Nitzsche number “Needles and Pins” in 1963. Although it made it to number 1 in Canada, the Searchers had the big hit with it in the United States and Great Britain the next year.
Jackie wrote “When You Walk in the Room” and also had a modest hit with it in 1963. The Searchers took it to the upper reaches of the charts in the United States and Great Britain the next year. It’s a terrific song that Pam Tillis returned to the charts as a big country hit in 1994.
Chris Hillman has a terrific cover with Jay Dee Maness on pedal steel, but it’s not an upbeat song. I have always wondered what it would sound like if you slowed the tempo down. That’s what Jackie did when she revisited it in 2011. Love hurts.
Jackie spent some time in England in 1965. She teamed up to write and record with Jimmy Page, as in the protopunk “Dream Boy.”
Living in Los Angeles, Jackie must have crossed paths with the Byrds at Ciro’s. She wrote “Don’t Doubt Yourself Babe” for their debut album. She had easily absorbed a Dylan strain into her songwriting and the Byrds added the 12-string, the harmony singing, and the Bo Diddley beat. What a great track.
This is what it sounded like when Jackie revisited the song in 2011.
Liberty must have known it wasn’t capitalizing on Jackie’s talent. The executives teamed her up with Burt Bacharach for a session in New York in 1965. Written by Bacharach and Hal David, “What the World Needs Now” was the result (released on Imperial, Liberty’s sister label). Dionne Warwick was the usual vessel for Bacharach and David’s work, but Warwick had rejected the song — fortunately, in my opinion. No one (including Warwick) has ever touched DeShannon’s version of the song. With DeShannon’s heartfelt vocal and Bacharach’s production — listen to the horn — this is one perfect pop song.
Warwick had rejected the song, Bacharach speculated, as too preachy. In form, I think the song is in fact a sermon, a la Johnny Mercer’s “Accentuate the Positive.” That is how I hear it anyway, and DeShannon took a lesson from it for her own songwriting. DeShannon moved on to Capitol Records to no great effect on her career. Her singing was at its peak, however, as I hear it in her 1:17 rendition of William Bell’s “You Don’t Miss Your Water.”
Here is her rendition of “Sweet Inspiration,” also produced by Chips Moman for Capitol.
Jackie moved on from Capitol to Atlantic. Neither Capitol nor Atlantic was able to do much for her, but in 2003 Rhino rereleased the 1973 Atlantic album Jackie with 11 previously unreleased tracks under the title Jackie…Plus in a limited edition. My copy is number 520 of 2500, so it can’t have sold too many copies, but I thought it was the best “new” disc of 2003. Six of the unreleased tracks were produced by Van Morrison. Here is Jackie singing Van’s “Sweet Sixteen” (with a little help from Van).
And here is Jackie singing Van’s own “Flamingos Fly” (with a little help from Van).
The last number on Jackie…Plus is “Through the Gates of Gold,” a true Sunday morning gospel song produced by Tom Dowd. Cissy Houston contributes one of the backing vocals.
Jackie wrote “Put a Little Love in Your Heart” with Randy James Myers and Jimmy Holiday. Randy was Jackie’s brother. He died a few months ago on March 10. Taking a cue from “What the World Needs Now,” the song is in the form of a sermon. That’s how I hear it anyway.
Jackie wrote “Bette Davis Eyes” with Donna Weiss for her own album New Arrangement (1974). It needed a new arrangement! The one on New Arrangement is unlistenable. Kim Carnes et al. gave it a new arrangement in 1981’s giant hit version. This is what it sounded like when Jackie revisited it in 2011.
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86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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96.) NOT THE BEE
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Aug 23, 2021 |
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This race horse bucked its rider, escaped the race track, and booked it down the highwayI mean how can you not respect this horse:
The Taliban allegedly set a woman on fire for “bad cooking”This is the kind of people we’re dealing with:
This guy spent two years developing a way to swing with wires like Spider-ManAdmit it: We’ve all wanted to swing around on ropes like Spider-Man. It’s just a primal thing. It would be a ton of fun. Swinging around like Spider-Man is one of the universal human ambitions.
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com |
Biden Considering Afghanistan Troop Extension Beyond Aug. 31
Special: Everyone Who Believes in God Should Watch This. It Will Blow Your Mind Unmasked Pelosi Gives Speech to Maskless Donors Putin Has an Inflation Problem Too NY Times Fact-Checks Biden: ‘Misleading Claims’ Special: Dems’ New Tax Plan Eliminates 401(k) Tax Deductions Deadly Firefight at Kabul Airport as US Boosts Airlift FDA: Don’t Take Livestock Drug Ivermectin for COVID
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99.) MARK LEVIN
August 20, 2021
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, We won’t allow the FBI to use the cover of atrocities in Afghanistan to release their report indicating that there was no insurrection at the Capitol on January 6th, citing scant evidence of coordination amongst rioters. When you hollow out a country it weakens the resolve of the military, law enforcement, and the nation’s foreign policy. America needs its resolve back so that it can inspire others again. Then, President Biden says they were prepared for every contingency but then said they weren’t prepared for the rapid collapse. Biden also said Americans weren’t having a hard time getting to the Kabul airport, that was a lie! Sec. Lloyd Austin has admitted to members of Congress that Americans are being beaten in Afghanistan and prevented from getting to the airport. This program recommends to Biden to use his staff to immediately draw a plan to extract every single American citizen out of that hell hole and then a plan targeting the top 10 Taliban commanders. Every minute that goes by without American action the Taliban is strengthening their grip. The Taliban is now going door-to-door searching for and hanging people that have sympathized with Americans. Later, Rep. Brian Mast calls in to discuss his dismay over the idea that American civilians and contractors might be killed by American weapons. Did Biden consider that the enemy could use American anti-aircraft weapons against Americans during extraction efforts? Biden has created a situation where we now have American hostages, it seems that every wrong decision imaginable was their plan all along.
THIS IS FROM:
Reuters
FBI finds scant evidence U.S. Capitol attack was coordinated – sources
Reuters
Biden Afghanistan policy counts on war weary Americans to lose interest
Right Scoop
After grueling HOURS in LIMBO, planes are finally flying and CNN’s Clarissa Ward is ABOARD.
Fox News
Black father tells board CRT keeps racism on ‘life support’, moments later they vote to ban it
PJ Media
Air Force Academy Cadets Forced to Watch BLM Video
Fox News
James Madison University trains students that Christians, White males are ‘oppressors’
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Washington Post
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Border Patrol Agent Ricardo Zarate Died From COVID-No Memorials From D.C. DemsBorder Patrol Agent Ricardo Zarate Died From COVID-No Memorials From D.C. Dems End of Watch: Monday, August 16, 2021 “Border Patrol Agent Ricardo Zarate died from complications as a… | |
Secretary of State Blinken admits he asks the Taliban for permission to evacuateAnthony Blinken went on to Face the Nation claiming he isn’t giving the Taliban credibility and then proved he was giving them credibility. He admitted he is getting Taliban permission… | |
Texas alone: 236,000 illegals committed more than 577,000 crimesTexas does what every state does and lists the criminal behavior of illegal aliens. Look at the stats on drugs. The data was summarized by ImmigrationReform.com. The Texas Department of… | |
Biden gives yet another delusional speechTyrant Joe Biden will mandate the US airlines provide 6 to 18 planes to cart refugees around the globe. A lot will come to the US no doubt. The new… | |
Desperate LA Times calls Larry Elder the Black face of white supremacyLA Times Headline: Column: Larry Elder is the Black face of white supremacy. You’ve been warned LA Times columnist Erika Smith must be desperate to demonize Larry Elder on the run-up… | |
Deep state president has Biden’s backGoerge W. Bush proves once again he’s a globalist deep state operative. The last thing he ever wanted was America First. America Last seems fine with him. He has no… | |
Kamala laughs when asked about stranded Americans & Joe laughs about being called unfitKamala and Joe’s Laughing Matter “What’s your response to reports of Americans….” Before she could complete her sentence, the vice president said. “Hold on, hold on. Slow down, everybody,” a… | |
Lockdown Aussies murder rescue dogs in their ‘dystopian hell state’A deranged council in an Australian shire murdered rescue dogs. They did it to prevent anyone from traveling to feed them. They’re worse than the Maoists. At least the Chinese… | |
More than 70 GOP national security officials who endorsed JoeWe are profoundly concerned about our nation’s security and standing in the world under the leadership of Donald Trump. The President has demonstrated that he is dangerously unfit to serve… | |
Flashback! When Obama et al thought Biden’s dementia was a jokeDuring one of the very awful annual roasts of White House correspondents, Barack Obama thought Joel McHale’s mocking of Joe Biden was quite funny. That was in 2014. What did… | |
Incoherence & indifference in Kabul & Biden’s aides say they were afraidDan Crenshaw said that in the case of one American family in Kabul, “an 18-month-old was beaten to keep the parents back. Joe Biden has to take action,” he said. “Allow… | |
Kamala vs. KamalaClueless Kamala Harris could soon be our president, but she’s no more qualified than Joe Biden. She has a handful of talking points she repeats over and over, but there… | |
As Afghans retake counties, Taliban kidnaps their childrenAfter The Northern Alliance under Ahmad Massoud took three counties back from the Taliban, the Taliban started taking the children of the Alliance fighters hostage. They have at least 20… | |
Nearly 70% strongly disapprove of Biden’s Afghanistan performanceNearly 70% of Americans strongly disapprove of Biden’s Afghanistan performance according to The Trafalgar Group. Another 9.8% disapprove. But 12.4% of strange people approve, with an additional even stranger 10.7%… | |
Chuck Schumer whoops it up as Kabul burns & America failsSenate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, who didn’t say anything as elderly died in nursing homes near his residence, is now dancing and whooping it up as Americans are stranded in… | |
Taliban rape dead bodies, are taking a woman from every familyAn Afghan woman who made it to India from Afghanistan revealed that the Taliban has sex with dead bodies, OpIndian reports. The woman, called Muscan, worked in the police force… | |
Hostage hiding in Kabul, “I really have given up hope…it’s just not possible”An American mother trapped in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan fears she will never see her kids again She is hiding with family members and Afghan allies and cannot reach Kabul’s U.S.-held airport… | |
US woman in Kabul: “coming to kill us…please help me”Listen to this brief audio clip that was shared on Twitter by Rep. Carol Miller (R-W.V.) who wrote, “We just received this audio from an incredibly brave American in Kabul.… | |
Watch former President Trump’s remarks in Cullman AlabamaPresident Trump reviewed his handling of the country compared to Biden’s. At one point, he criticized the growing “woke” culture in America at a political rally in Alabama on Saturday.… | |
Report commanding general of the 82nd told Brits to stop rescues outside the airportThere has been tremendous tension between the US and UK forces as the Brits go out and rescue people and the US stays in the airport because of a deal… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) THE INTERCEPT
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
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