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1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 8.26.21
Good Thursday morning.
Florida has been the U.S.’s pandemic epicenter for weeks, but more voters than not approve of Gov. Ron DeSantis and say he deserves a second term, according to a new Quinnipiac University Poll released Wednesday.
Voters aren’t sold on his overall pandemic strategy, disapproving 51%-46%, and they are even less enthused about how he’s handled public schools, which was disliked 51%-44%. Yet the Q Poll found 47% of voters approved of the DeSantis overall, compared to 45% who disapproved.
The measure was markedly improved from a year ago when the same pollster said he was double digits in the negative.
“Amid a frightening surge in cases, DeSantis weathers withering criticism from critics on his handling of COVID-19. His numbers have actually improved from a year ago. But he’s still not as popular as he was before the pandemic,” Quinnipiac University polling analyst Tim Malloy said.
Asked straight up whether the Republican incumbent deserved another term, voters said yes by a 3-point margin, 48%-45%.
While the numbers are welcome news for DeSantis’ 2022 team, Quinnipiac University poured water on the Governor’s 2024 aspirations. They asked their sample of 889 self-identified registered voters whether they think DeSantis should run for President in 2024, and the answer was a resounding “no.” Just 35% of Florida voters back the concept.
Not even all Republicans want to see it. While 67% are open to a President DeSantis, a full 24% aren’t in. A full 61% of independent voters are opposed, also, with just 35% backing a DeSantis 2024 run.
As one would expect, Democrats almost uniformly don’t want him to run for President, though 2% of those surveyed from the opposing party support the idea.
The Q Poll also that, as of now, Floridians think U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio should be reelected, 47%-41%. President Joe Biden’s flagging approval rating — he was in the negative 40%-53% — only helps his and DeSantis’ reelection odds.
The poll was conducted Aug. 17-21 and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.3 percentage points.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@MarcoRubio: A President that abandons Americans in order to meet a deadline set by a medieval band of terrorists will forever be disgraced
—@DonaldJTrumpJr: The new Governor of New York just announced that an additional 12,000 previously undisclosed COVID-19 deaths occurred under Gov (Andrew) Cuomo. That’s almost four 9/11s under the Dem’s units of measurement. Will there be criminal charges brought now for Cuomo’s deadly nursing home cover-up?
—@GwenGraham: I am in an emergency room in Gainesville for a non-COVID-19-related matter. We are the rare exception. Everyone else appears to have #COVID. So sick. Pleading for care. Pleading to get vaccinated. For God’s sake #GetVaccinated, you don’t want to be here.
Tweet, tweet:
—@AndyMarlette: Former Mayor, @FloridaGOP fundraiser, and @mattgaetz supporter sentenced to 5 years in prison for secretly filming porn of teenage boys in shower … More investigation needed into the Panhandle’s small, incestuous, Gaetz-dominated political class
— DAYS UNTIL —
Boise vs. UCF — 7; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 8; Notre Dame at FSU — 10; NFL regular season begins — 14; Bucs home opener — 14; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 19; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 19; Alabama at UF — 23; Dolphins home opener — 24; Jaguars home opener — 24; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 25; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 36; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 36; MLB regular season ends — 37; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 41; World Series Game 1 — 54; ‘Dune’ premieres — 57; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 62; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 62; Georgia at UF — 65; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 68; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 68; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 71; ‘Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 73; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 74; Miami at FSU — 79; ExcelinEd’s National Summit on Education begins — 84; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 85; FSU vs. UF — 93; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 97; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 106; ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 113; NFL season ends — 136; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 138; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 138; NFL playoffs begin — 142; Super Bowl LVI — 171; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 211; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 255; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 280; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 316; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 328; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 407; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 442.
“In Florida, the pandemic is worse now than it has ever been before.” via Dan Levin of The New York Times — More people in Florida are catching the coronavirus, being hospitalized and dying of COVID-19 now than at any previous point in the pandemic, underscoring the perils of limiting public health measures as the delta variant rips through the state. This week, 227 virus deaths were being reported each day in Florida, on average, as of Tuesday, a record for the state and by far the most in the United States right now. The average for new known cases reached 23,314 a day on the weekend, 30% higher than the state’s previous peak in January. Across the country, new deaths have climbed to more than 1,000 a day, on average.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Coronavirus cases increase by 26,203; hospitalizations grow by 76” via Daylina Miller of WUSF — The number of coronavirus cases in Florida rose by 26,203 on Wednesday, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The agency also reported that the state’s deaths from COVID-19 increased by nine to 42,731. Florida’s coronavirus case total now stands at 3,130,144. There were 17,164 people with the coronavirus being treated in the state’s hospitals, an increase of 76 over Tuesday. Of those in the hospital, 3,682 COVID-19 patients were in intensive care, which was almost 54% of the state’s staffed ICU beds. While the cases and deaths were recorded Wednesday, they may have occurred in previous weeks or months.
“Ron DeSantis: Consequences coming for school districts bucking his anti-mask mandate order” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis says there could be more consequences to come for districts that flout the state’s rules against mask mandates in public schools. A growing number of school districts have been adopting mask mandates for students despite the administration’s threats to punish district administrators. Those that already had mandates have stood their ground or returned to them after initially backing off. When asked by a reporter whether he would reverse his ban on school mask mandates, DeSantis returned the question, “How about keeping the power with the parents?”
“Bodies stacked to the ceiling as COVID-19 surge creates backlog at Florida funeral homes, crematories” via Michelle Meredith of WFLA — At West Side Crematory in Winter Garden, they’re overwhelmed with the remains of people that need to be cremated. There’s an influx of bodies like they’ve never seen, worse than the first wave of COVID-19. The area where bodies are stored before being cremated is stacked to the ceiling. The staff is working day and night to honor the dead. One funeral director said that in a 30-minute period where he talked to his partner, four new cases came in. Mike Marchetti, the area manager for Newcomer Funeral Homes, says as much as they don’t want to, sometimes they have to delay meetings with families and delay funerals because they only have so much staff.
“DeSantis administration to address Orlando monoclonal antibody booking problems” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Florida’s monoclonal antibody treatment sites aren’t yet operating at capacity amid hiccups at some sites, including one in Orlando. Speaking from the latest treatment site opening in The Villages on Wednesday, DeSantis raised public awareness for Regeneron’s antibody cocktail. The FDA has approved that therapeutic for people at high risk for severe infection who test positive for COVID-19 or are exposed to the virus. The drug has been shown to reduce the risk for hospitalizations and death by 70%. Officials say more than 10,000 people have been treated with Regeneron’s cocktail in Florida.
“DeSantis administration continues damage control on infamous library picture” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Florida Division of Emergency Management Chief Medical Officer Dr. Kenneth Scheppke offered an update on the patient in that disturbing image, Toma Dean. “We’re hearing great stories from around the state, success stories. One person that has been in the news quite a lot, when we first opened our site in Jacksonville, we had a woman that was so sick, she was laying on the floor,” Scheppke said. He added he had the “honor and the privilege of speaking to her.” “She really credits this medication with saving her life. She told me that the folks at the Jacksonville center were wonderful, and they treated her gently and got her the treatment, and she is convinced,” he said.
“Palm Beach Schools to seek legal challenge of DeSantis’ mask mandate ban” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — The Palm Beach School Board voted unanimously at an emergency meeting to go ahead with engaging outside legal counsel to challenge DeSantis’ order that prohibits mask mandates. The board is the second district to announce legal steps to defy the Governor after Broward County. Broward, home to Florida’s second-largest school district, voted on Aug. 10 to challenge DeSantis’ order. Palm Beach County School District is the state’s fifth-largest school district. Palm Beach School Board Member Alexandria Ayala said she believes that mandatory masking for students is the best way to keep kids in school — and healthy.
“In the mask debate, docking pay for school board members hurt women politicians most” via Danielle J. Brown of Florida Phoenix — The fight over who controls schools during the COVID-19 pandemic could result in docking the pay of constitutionally elected officials on local school boards, most of whom are women. For example, all nine members of the Broward County School Board are female, and eight of the nine voted recently to mandate masks at public schools, moving against the DeSantis administration and facing loss in pay for board duties. In Alachua County, based in Gainesville, the school board has a female majority, three women and two men. That district also faces a loss of pay after voting for a mask mandate. Families could opt out of masking for medical reasons.
“More families look to leave their current public schools due to ‘COVID-19 harassment’; 10 districts now use strict mask mandates” via Danielle Brown of the Florida Phoenix — Step Up for Students, the organization overseeing Florida’s scholarships, has received 68 applications for the so-called Hope Scholarship under the “COVID-19 harassment,” category, according to Scott Kent, a communications staffer. There are about 2.8 million students in Florida’s public education system, according to the Florida Department of Education, so the number of new scholarships related to COVID-19 harassment so far is considered small. That said, there could be more applications on the way, with the school year so young. And more school districts are adopting mask policies that some parents vehemently oppose.
“Florida doctors did not walk off the job” via Jude Joffe-Block and Ali Swenson of The Associated Press — A news conference held by doctors in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, to urge the public to get vaccinated amid a statewide surge of COVID-19 was undermined online as false reports claimed the physicians had walked off the job. Doctors who participated in Monday’s event said they did not walk off the job or refuse to treat patients. The false claims, they said, have led to threats and harassment toward their colleagues and hospitals. Dr. Jennifer Buczyner, a neurologist who organized the news conference, said she was frustrated by the false assertion. “This was a physician-driven news conference to encourage our community to get vaccinated and talk about the impact this has had on our community,” Buczyner said.
“DeSantis blames pro-Andrew Cuomo press for New York nursing home deaths” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — DeSantis regaled the Fox News Primetime audience with theories as to why Cuomo got favorable treatment from the press. “I think a lot of it was corporate media. Politicians are going to do what they want,” DeSantis said. “But you go back to when he was being lionized, at the beginning of this.” “We all had to make a decision on how to handle nursing homes. Florida, we prevented, prohibited hospitals from discharging a sick nursing home patient back into nursing homes because we understood the hazard that would have,” DeSantis said. “The corporate media never talked about that or cared about that, even though that’s a decision that had a direct impact on the lives of very elderly people.”
— CORONA LOCAL —
“Tampa requires COVID-19 vaccinations for city employees” via Henry Queen of the Tampa Bay Business Journal — The city of Tampa will require its employees to have the COVID-19 vaccine by Sept. 30, Mayor Jane Castor announced. Exceptions are still in place. Employees can show proof of having COVID-19 antibodies instead of getting the vaccine. Individuals who are not vaccinated must wear an N95 mask and have a weekly COVID-19 test, Castor said. Castor’s mandate comes days after the Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine received full approval from the FDA. The vaccine was previously administered under a federal emergency use authorization.
—“Parent of 12-year-old in ICU urges Polk County to take up mask mandates” via Jordan Bowen of Fox 13
—“For days, a Winter Haven woman battled COVID-19 in the hospital. A nightmare awaited her at home” via Kimberly C. Moore of The Lakeland Ledger
“Sarasota teacher dies of COVID-19 after falling ill before school year began” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Sarasota teacher Michelle Cook had a passion for helping struggling children and didn’t let the pandemic stop her, taking time to deliver books and food to students last year while she was doing virtual instruction. Cook tutored an autistic child who was nonverbal this summer, taught summer classes at a school for children with disabilities, and previously spent time teaching at the Triad Alternative School, a place for children who have struggled elsewhere. “The thing that made her so good at that is she’s nonjudgmental; she’s the most forgiving person and just had the ability to accept people and students where they were,” said Cook’s sister, Bethanne Bearden.
“Fletcher Middle goes virtual marking second schoolwide closure in Duval County in two days” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — Another secondary school is closing in Duval County during only the third week of school. On Wednesday, Duncan U. Fletcher Middle School announced switching to online instruction starting Thursday until Sept. 1. The school will reopen on Sept. 2. This marks the second Jacksonville campus to fully close in two days. On Tuesday, Baldwin Middle-Senior High announced a closure. To date, the school listed 33 cases among students and staff. Thirty-two of the cases are among students. That number is expected to increase when the school’s public-facing dashboard recording COVID-19 cases on campus is updated Wednesday evening.
“Lee Health praises antibody therapy, says it’s no substitute for vaccination” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Lee Health officials on Wednesday praised monoclonal antibody treatment as a “potentially lifesaving early intervention” for COVID-19 patients. But hospital officials stressed that’s no reason to skip vaccinations. “Prevention through vaccination is the best defense against COVID-19, and MAB treatment is not a substitute for getting vaccinated,” reads an email from spokesman Jonathan Little. The hospital system was the first in Florida to report a known patient death from COVID-19. More than 17 months later, 859 have died while in Lee Health care. That includes 12 who died Tuesday and six who died Monday. The hospital system reports it currently has 646 COVID-19 patients in isolation, with 116 in intensive care and 88 on ventilators.
“Anti-mask protester arrested after shoving high school student” via Austen Erblat of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The debate over school masks boiled over Wednesday morning when a mask opponent was arrested for shoving a masked high school student in Fort Lauderdale and twisting her arm. Dan Bauman, a Fort Lauderdale man with a history of confrontations over masks, was charged with aggravated child abuse. He had been trying to video record the student at Fort Lauderdale High School. The student responded, “I’ve had enough for four days,” and tried to grab Bauman’s phone. Bauman then pushed the student’s shoulder and grabbed her hand, twisting her arm. A police officer and a security guard grabbed Bauman and placed him under arrest. He was taken to the Broward County Jail.
— STATEWIDE —
“Increasing threat of tropical development in western Caribbean, southern Gulf this weekend” via Ray Hawthorne of WUSF — A new tropical depression is likely to form late this week or weekend over the western Caribbean. Atmospheric conditions favor strengthening once it enters the southern or western Gulf of Mexico by Sunday. Showers and thunderstorms associated with the tropical wave near the coast of northern Columbia are more concentrated Wednesday morning. Most of the reliable global models are forecasting the wave to become a tropical cyclone Friday or Saturday in the western Caribbean. It is likely to pass close to the Yucatán Peninsula or western Cuba during the time before entering the Gulf of Mexico later this weekend. There are still plenty of questions regarding exactly where this storm will form and just how strong the high-pressure ridge will be.
“Judge to decide whether to reinstate federal unemployment benefits suspended in June” via James Call of the Tallahassee Democrat — Tallahassee Circuit Judge Layne Smith began the hearing telling attorneys representing the workers what he thinks the case is about — whether Florida law bound DeSantis to accept the money and distribute it to the unemployed. Lawyers for both sides have until 5 p.m. Thursday to file proposed orders on how and why Smith should rule: Either to secure more than $400 million in federal unemployment benefits for jobless Floridians or dismiss the suit. “The focus of this case,” he added, “is whether the defendants (DeSantis and Department of Economic Opportunity Director Dane Eagle) had the authority to do what they did. If they did, there you go, and it’s a political issue … that’s really the battle lines on it.”
“Citrus consultant Elizabeth Steger forecasts Florida orange crop to fall by 1.5%” via Paul Nutcher of The Lakeland Ledger — Private citrus consultant Steger called for a public-private effort to assist growers with issues facing the industry in her latest report, which predicted another decline in the citrus harvest this season. Steger forecast a 1.5% decline in boxes of oranges that will be picked in Florida groves during the 2021-22 growing season. Her prediction is a smaller decline than was predicted last year but continues the trend of an overall smaller citrus crop in Florida. Last year, Steger predicted an 8.4% decrease in the crop. She said the drop rate, the percentage of oranges falling from trees before the harvest, was very high at 43%.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Mike Grieco files bill to make forging, possessing fake vaccine cards a felony” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — On Wednesday, Rep. Grieco of Miami Beach filed HB 47, which, if enacted, would impose on forgers and possessors of fake vaccine proof the same penalties levied against people who counterfeit or own fake government-issued IDs. Starting Oct. 1, 2022, first-time offenders would be charged with a third-degree felony and risk fines of up to $5,000. Repeat offenders and felons could receive prison time. While the law would apply to all cases of vaccine fraud, including if parents provide fake vaccine paperwork for children entering public school, Grieco told Florida Politics his reason for filing it now is “obviously” because of issues related to COVID-19.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Joshua Aubuchon, Delegal Aubuchon Consulting: Florida Craft Spirits Association
Erica Chanti, Rubin Turnbull & Associates: Independent Living Systems
Donn Scott Jr.: SPLC Action Fund
Corey Staniscia, CS Consulting Group: Habitat for Humanity of Broward
Crystal Stickle, Magnolia Advocacy: Adelanto HealthCare Ventures, Bayada Home Health Care, Florida Medical Association, Seniorlink
— 2022 —
“Florida poll: 53% disapprove of Joe Biden’s job performance” via Nick Niedzwiadek of POLITICO — A majority of Florida voters disapprove of Biden’s job performance. Roughly 53% of respondents gave Biden negative marks, compared with 40% who approved of the President’s performance seven months into his tenure. Another 7% said they were unsure, with the poll carrying a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.3 percentage points. Unsurprisingly, 87% of self-identified Democrats said they were supportive of Biden, whereas 91% of Republicans expressed disapproval. However, Biden also fared poorly with independents, who landed 56-36 against the President.
“Republican ad ‘Back to School’ dings Stephanie Murphy on inflation” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Republicans continue to hammer swing-district Democratic Rep. Murphy on inflation, with a new ad charging she’s a reason parents are spending more money this year on school supplies for their children. The 30-second social media ad “Back to School” from the National Republican Congressional Committee begins looking like a back-to-school TV commercial a retail store might run, encouraging parents to buy school supplies and clothes. But the message is a downer, noting that inflation has pushed up electronics prices by 9%, shoes by 8%, and dresses by 19%. “It’s that time of year,” a narrator says as children rush down a school corridor. “Unfortunately, Democrats created an inflation crisis. And now you’re spending more.”
To watch the ad, click on the image below:
“Anna Paulina Luna calls for federal red tide aid in latest campaign push” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Luna released a new campaign video Tuesday calling on the federal government to step up in response to the red tide crisis. In the one-and-a-half-minute clip, Luna rides along via boat with charter fishing guide Cpt. Ray Markham to discuss the red tide problem afflicting the Pinellas County coast this summer. The algae bloom led the county to collect more than 1,712 tons of dead fish and caused an uptick in respiratory problems. “Water’s actually one of the bloodlines here in Florida,” Luna, who is running for Florida’s 13th Congressional District, said in the video. In the video, Luna also applauded DeSantis’ measures addressing red tide and urged the federal government to match the state’s efforts.
To watch the video, click on the image below:
Happening tonight:
“Camille Evans, Tico Perez to lead Orange County redistricting” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Retired lobbyist Perez and banking lawyer Evans will co-chair Orange County’s advisory council on redistricting based on the 2020 census. On Tuesday, the Orange County Commission confirmed Perez, Evans, and 13 others to the panel that will oversee efforts to redraw the commission’s boundaries in time for the 2022 county elections. Perez, a Republican, is mostly retired from a long career in Central Florida political and civic scenes as a lobbyist, lawyer, and political commentator on local TV and radio shows. Evans, a Democrat, is managing partner of the Virtus law firm in Windermere.
— CORONA NATION —
“NIH director: ‘It’s almost like we have a new pandemic’” via Rachel Roubein of The Washington Post — Both privately and publicly, federal officials are admitting a hard truth: they don’t know exactly when — and how — this wave will end. The delta variant, which is more than twice as contagious as previous strains, has fundamentally altered the course of the coronavirus in the United States. “Delta came along, and it’s almost like we have a new pandemic now,” Francis Collins, head of the National Institutes of Health, said. “Everything we thought we knew about COVID-19 has to be revised.” “I think we’re in a world of trouble for at least the next couple of months, but exactly what the shape of that trouble looks like, I can’t tell you,” he added.
“Pentagon: U.S. troops must get their COVID-19 vaccines ASAP” via The Associated Press — Military troops must immediately begin to get the COVID-19 vaccine, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said in a memo Wednesday, ordering service leaders to “impose ambitious timelines for implementation.” More than 800,000 service members have yet to get their shots. And now that the Pfizer vaccine has received full approval from the FDA, the Defense Department is adding it to the list of required shots troops must get as part of their military service. The memo does not dictate a specific timeline for completing the vaccinations. But it says the military services will have to report regularly on their progress. A senior defense official said that Austin has made it clear to the services that he expects them to move quickly and that this will be completed in weeks, not months.
“Vaccine efficacy diminished as delta arose, CDC report shows” via John Tozzi of Bloomberg — The effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines among front-line workers declined to 66% after the delta variant became dominant, compared with 91% before it arose, according to a report from the CDC. The vaccines are still protective, the CDC said, and the finding must be interpreted with caution, as vaccine effectiveness might wane over time and the estimates of efficacy were imprecise. “Although these interim findings suggest a moderate reduction in the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines in preventing infection, the sustained two-thirds reduction in infection risk underscores the continued importance and benefits of COVID-19 vaccination,” researchers wrote in the agency’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
“‘I’m still not planning to get it’: FDA approval not swaying some vaccine holdouts” via Dan Diamond of The Washington Post — For five months, Chris Brummett has ignored his wife’s pleas that he get a coronavirus vaccine. He cares even less that federal regulators finally issued a long-awaited approval for one of them. “My wife is on me all the time to do it,” said Brummett. Brummett, a libertarian critical of both the Biden and Donald Trump administrations, said he’s struggling to trust any government messages about the virus. Hopes that many of those skeptics would be swayed by vaccine approval appear to have been unrealistic, according to interviews with 16 unvaccinated Americans, including six who said earlier this year that they would be more likely to get vaccinated if the FDA approved the shots.
“Holes in reporting of breakthrough COVID-19 cases hamper CDC response” via Erin Banco of POLITICO — The CDC is using outdated and unreliable data on coronavirus breakthrough infections to help make major decisions such as who gets booster shots, according to three officials with direct knowledge of the situation. The agency originally tried to track all infections in vaccinated people, from mild to severe. But in May, it decided to focus on the most severe cases, saying that would allow it to better monitor overall conditions and make more informed, targeted policy decisions. More than a dozen states rely on hospital administrators to report breakthrough infections. The resulting data is often aggregated, inaccurate, and omits critical details for teasing out trends.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Only a fraction of COVID-19 rental assistance has been distributed” via Andrew Ackerman and Will Parker of The Wall Street Journal — The U.S. program to help tenants and landlords struggling with the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic is still moving at a slow pace and has delivered a fraction of the promised aid, data released by the Treasury Department on Wednesday show. Since December, Congress has appropriated a total of $46.6 billion to help tenants who were behind on their rent. As of July 31, just $4.7 billion had been distributed to landlords and tenants, the Treasury said. Wednesday’s data show that rental aid has begun to move faster in some states, though July’s $1.7 billion reflected only a modest overall increase from the $1.5 billion distributed in June.
“Delta Air Lines is raising health insurance premiums for unvaccinated employees by $200 a month to cover higher COVID-19 costs” via Leslie Josephs of CNBC — Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian notified employees Wednesday that they will face $200 monthly increases on their health insurance premiums starting Nov. 1 if they aren’t vaccinated against COVID-19, citing steep costs to cover employees who are hospitalized with the virus. Unvaccinated employees will face other restrictions, including indoor masking effective immediately and weekly COVID-19 tests starting Sept. 12. Delta, which self-insures its employees, stands out in its plans to raise premiums for unvaccinated workers to cover the higher costs of insuring employees who get COVID-19.
“The GOP struggles with what to do on employer vaccine mandates” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — Biden this week responded to the FDA’s full authorization of the Pfizer coronavirus vaccine by calling on employers around the country to mandate it for their employees — which it seems many will. And Republicans as a party don’t seem to know what to do with that. In the days since the FDA’s authorization and Biden’s call, Republicans who have otherwise fought tooth and nail against vaccine mandates have been surprisingly quiet about the prospect. And the few who have spoken out have generally said employers should be allowed to implement them. But unlike the party’s posture toward school mask mandates, government vaccine mandates and vaccine passports, there is little cohesion on this subject. So far, only one state bans employer vaccine mandates: Montana.
— MORE CORONA —
“Jail doctor prescribes livestock drug ivermectin to detainees with COVID-19 despite FDA warnings” via Kim Bellware of The Washington Post — An Arkansas jail and its health care provider are facing criticisms of “medical experimentation” because the jail’s medical staff has been treating COVID-19 patients with ivermectin, a drug commonly used for deworming livestock. Washington County Justice of the Peace Eva Madison said she heard reports of the practice Tuesday after a county employee visited a Karas Health Care coronavirus testing site at the Washington County Detention Center in Fayetteville and was prescribed ivermectin despite testing negative for the coronavirus. “When this employee told me that, I thought, ‘Our sheriff has common sense. He’ll know what’s going on,’” Madison said. Madison said she has a good rapport with Washington County Sheriff Tim Helder but was dismayed when he confirmed her suspicions — and defended the practice.
—”Oklahoma nurses and doctors beg unvaccinated to help stressed ICUs: ‘I have zipped up too many body bags’” via Timothy Bella of The Washington Post
“When your friend group has that one person who won’t get vaccinated” via Ashley Fetters of The Washington Post — Now that a pandemic that briefly looked to be ending has surged back instead, vaccination status remains depressingly relevant, especially when meeting up with the whole gang at a bar or in any other tight space. Some groups with a lone unvaccinated holdout are devising new ways to get together safely, while others are quietly wondering what it all means for the future of their friendships. How can we possibly keep hanging out with this person? But, literally: How? Irene S. Levine, a psychologist and author, suggests having an honest group conversation about boundaries and planning gatherings accordingly. “People that are vaccinated and only comfortable with vaccinated people can get together,” among themselves, she says.
“That email asking for proof of vaccination might be a phishing scam” via Tatum Hunter of The Washington Post — As coronavirus cases rise because of the new delta variant, pandemic-related email scams are on the rise, too. Pandemic-related phishing attempts in June increased 33%, compared to a lull this spring and early summer when concerns about the virus temporarily waned, researchers at security firm Proofpoint found. The spike occurred right when Google searches for “delta variant” were peaking. Hackers know that communication from employers or health organizations about the coronavirus can compel people to click. Employers are asking for negative coronavirus test results, return-to-work feedback forms and, in some cases, proof of vaccination. That’s fertile ground for phishing and ransomware.
“The U.S. is randomly rejecting travelers from Europe with valid visas” via Annalisa Merelli of Quartz — Travelers who aren’t citizens or green cardholders cannot travel to the U.S. unless they have been out of the Schengen Area for at least 14 days, irrespective of whether they live and pay taxes in the U.S., or are tourists. Despite holding valid visas and proof of being out of a restricted area for more than 14 days, some travelers are denied boarding at Dubrovnik’s airport. What is happening appears to be nothing more than a glitch, and travelers who have been denied visa clearance were eventually allowed on later flights, but not without inconveniences that include risking delayed returns to work or family separation.
“For NFL teams with unvaccinated quarterbacks, this could be a long, complicated season” via Mark Maske of The Washington Post — As the NFL season nears, the competitive implications of a team having an unvaccinated quarterback have been underscored. Minnesota Vikings starter Kirk Cousins was quarantined early in training camp as a high-risk close contact. Lamar Jackson was sidelined while in isolation after he tested positive for the virus for a second time. Cam Newton missed at least one joint practice with the New York Giants before he’s eligible to return to the Patriots’ facility. The NFL has fared far better than the country as a whole with its vaccination rate. The league said earlier this month that 91.7% of NFL players had received at least one vaccine dose. But some players remain unvaccinated, and there are competitive implications for that.
“Krispy Kreme is sweetening its free doughnut promotion for vaccinated people” via Jordan Valinsky of CNN — Krispy Kreme is doubling down on its popular free doughnut promotion for customers vaccinated against COVID-19. Beginning August 30, the chain gives anyone with vaccination proof two free doughnuts every day until Sept. 5. In March, the chain began its promotion to encourage people to get vaccinated with a free doughnut a day for the rest of the year. So far, Krispy Kreme says it has given away more than 2.5 million doughnuts through the deal. The chain is also making a special heart-shaped doughnut to give away, in addition to a traditional glazed doughnut.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden says the U.S. is poised to meet the Afghan withdrawal deadline, at least for now.” via Michael D. Shear, Annie Karni and Eric Schmitt of The New York Times — But the President had spoken to military leaders so that they would be prepared to “adjust that timetable, should that become necessary.” “It is a tenuous situation,” Biden said. “We are currently on pace to finish by Aug. 31,” he said. “The sooner we can finish, the better. Each day of operations brings added risk to our troops.” Much of the success of that effort hinged on the Taliban’s continuing to cooperate. He said the legitimacy of the Taliban government in the eyes of the United States and its allies depended on the approach it now takes to uphold its international obligations, including ensuring that Afghanistan does not once again become a base for international terrorism.
“Biden, needing a win, enters a sprint for his economic agenda” via Jim Tankersley and Emily Cochrane of The New York Times — Biden, his aides, and his allies in Congress face a Sept. sprint to secure a legislative victory that could define his early presidency. Democrats are racing the clock after party leaders in the House struck a deal this week to advance the two-track approach that Biden hopes will deliver a $4 trillion overhaul of the federal government’s role in the economy. If the party’s factions can bridge their differences in time, they could deliver a signature legislative achievement for Biden, on par with the New Deal or Great Society. If they fail, Biden could find both halves of his economic agenda dashed, at a time when his popularity is slumping and few if any of his other top priorities have a chance to pass Congress.
“Biden administration will continue challenging ‘Remain in Mexico’” via Caroline Simon of Roll Call — The Biden administration vowed to continue fighting to end a controversial Trump-era border policy that forces asylum-seekers to wait out their cases in Mexico, after the Supreme Court ruled against its attempt to rescind the program. Roberto Velasco Alvarez, a senior official in the Mexican foreign ministry, confirmed in a tweet that the U.S. government had been in touch over the ruling and that the two nations will “exchange information” to determine what action Mexico will take. Meanwhile, there are other steps the Biden administration can take to challenge MPP, which it moved to unwind as soon as Biden took office on the grounds that it was dangerous and inhumane, forcing vulnerable asylum-seekers to remain in Mexico for long periods of time.
“Biden receives inconclusive intelligence report on COVID-19 origins” via Ellen Nakashima, Yasmeen Abutaleb and Joel Achenbach of The Washington Post — Biden on Tuesday received a classified report from the intelligence community that was inconclusive about the origins of the novel coronavirus, including whether the pathogen jumped from an animal to a human as part of a natural process, or escaped from a lab in central China. The intelligence community will seek within days to declassify elements of the report for potential public release, officials said. The assessment is the result of a 90-day sprint after Biden tasked his intelligence agencies in May to produce a report “that could bring us closer to a definitive conclusion” on the origins of a virus that has killed more than 4 million people globally and wrecked national economies. But intelligence officials fell short of a consensus.
“Biden administration to restart oil and gas leasing” via Jacob Fischler of the Florida Phoenix — The Interior Department will make significant steps toward restarting its leasing programs for onshore and offshore oil and gas development in the coming months, the Biden administration said in a court filing. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management anticipates holding a sale for offshore leases in October or November, the administration said. The Bureau of Land Management, which handles onshore leases, would need longer, according to the court filing. The agency will publish parcel lists for upcoming sales by the end of this month, with a notice of sale to be published in December. The sale itself would then occur 30 days later.
— EPILOGUE: TRUMP —
“In latest bow to Donald Trump, GOP lawmakers in Pennsylvania plan to launch hearings on 2020 vote” via Elise Viebeck of The Washington Post — Republican lawmakers in Pennsylvania plan to formally launch hearings as part of an investigation into the 2020 vote in the state, the latest GOP-backed effort to revisit an election that Trump has falsely claimed was fraudulent. State Senate President Pro Tempore Jake Corman said this week that lawmakers are pursuing a “full forensic investigation” of the election to examine ballots and voter rolls. “I don’t necessarily have faith in the results,” he told conservative media personality Wendy Bell in an interview. Corman said the hearings could begin as soon as this week. A spokesman declined to offer specifics but said they would occur in “the very near future.”
“Federal judge in Michigan orders pro-Trump lawyers disciplined over lawsuit seeking to overturn 2020 election” via Rosalind S. Helderman of The Washington Post — A federal judge ordered that Sidney Powell, L. Lin Wood, and seven other attorneys who filed a lawsuit seeking to overturn the state’s 2020 presidential election be disciplined, calling the suit “a historic and profound abuse of the judicial process.” In a scathing 110-page opinion, Judge Linda Parker wrote that the lawyers made assertions in court that were not backed by evidence and had failed to do the due diligence required by legal rules. “This case was never about fraud,” she wrote. “It was about undermining the People’s faith in our democracy and debasing the judicial process to do so.” She ordered the lawyers to pay the attorney’s fees for their opponents — the city of Detroit and the state of Michigan.
— CRISIS —
“Jan. 6 investigators include Trump White House in first document requests” via Nicholas Wu and Betsy Woodruff Swan of POLITICO — The select committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection sent a flurry of requests to federal agencies for records related to the attack, including communications from the Trump White House. It’s the panel’s first step to seek documents on how the U.S. government handled the chaos of the siege on the legislature. Set up by House Democrats with two anti-Trump GOP members, the select committee is escalating its investigation even as the chamber breaks for a monthlong recess. The committee, chaired by Rep. Bennie Thompson, plans to seek executive branch records related to the attack and its run-up, including “communications within and among the White House and Executive Branch agencies” on and before Jan. 6.
“Secret Service warned Capitol Police about violent threats one day before Jan. 6” via Betsy Woodruff Swan and Nicholas Wu of POLITICO — Just a day before the Jan. 6 riot, the Secret Service warned the U.S. Capitol Police that their officers could face violence at the hands of Trump supporters. The Secret Service’s emails shed light on intelligence lapses by the Capitol Police previously highlighted by both the department’s inspector general and a bipartisan report by Senate committees. Since then, the Hill’s law enforcement agency has pledged reform and said it had made changes to ensure the effective sharing of intelligence. The Capitol Police argued that while many threats like the ones described in the Secret Service warnings circulated in the days before the attack, no intelligence suggested a large-scale assault on the level seen on Jan. 6.
“Report details mishandling of police emergency system on Jan. 6” via Eric Tucker and Michael Balsamo of The Associated Press — U.S. Capitol Police didn’t adequately respond to frantic calls for help from officers when they pressed panic buttons on their radios seeking immediate backup as scores of pro-Trump rioters beat officers with bats, poles and other weapons, an inspector general’s report found. The report offered new details about the shortcomings of law enforcement during the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol. The report found that most emergency activations from individual officers’ radios were never simulcast on the police radio, a standard protocol designed to spread the word to other officers about emergencies and crises. The report said that the on-duty watch commander appears not to have been made aware of at least some of the system activations.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Marco Rubio slams ‘out of touch’ Biden as Afghanistan ‘catastrophe’ continues” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Rubio took to Fox News describing Biden as “oblivious” and saying the deadline to get people out of the “chaos” of the airport in Kabul was not the end of the month, but sooner. He also said the outcome could have been expected. “This is what you get when a President is completely out of touch with reality,” Rubio said, “(Aug. 31) … is the deadline of the last plane to take off — the real deadline is probably Friday or Saturday. August 31 is the last date there will be any American on the ground in terms of uniforms. The real deadline is actually this week; it’s not the 31st.”
“Matt Gaetz failed to properly disclose his abysmal book sales” via Roger Sollenberger of The Daily Beast — Amid a Justice Department investigation into alleged sex crimes and a related House Ethics probe, beleaguered Congressman Gaetz appears to have committed at least one much smaller but more straightforward federal violation: failure to disclose how much money he made from a book he published last September. When The Daily Beast inquired about the omission last week, a Gaetz spokesperson said the office needed “additional documentation” from the publisher and was “in the process of receiving that information and amending the Congressman’s financial disclosure.” Sure enough, an amended financial disclosure was filed three days after The Daily Beast reached out asking about the undisclosed book income.
“Ted Deutch said U.S. cannot allow Afghanistan to become another Iran” via Antonio Fins of The Palm Beach Post — Congressman Deutch said fears a terrorist group could disrupt the Kabul airlift is all the more reason to ensure Afghanistan does not become another Iran. Deutch, a Boca Raton Democrat who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Middle East, North Africa and Global Counterterrorism, said he understands “our focus right now is getting people out.” Deutch added the pace of evacuations in the past week suggested there is time to fly out all U.S. citizens and Afghans who assisted the allied war effort, but that assertion was disputed by Republican U.S. Sen. Rubio in a speech in West Palm Beach on Wednesday.
“Carlos Giménez says he knows why Democrats aren’t as vocal as Republicans about Cuba” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Giménez has a theory for why Biden and other Democrats aren’t talking more about human rights violations in Cuba that prompted citizens of the island nation and thousands in the United States to take to the streets in protest. It’s not for fear that intervening could prompt retaliation and destabilize the region, nor is it because the U.S. spent the last two decades entrenched in war overseas. No, the reason why toppling the communist regime in Cuban isn’t among Biden and his party’s most talked about subjects is simple, according to Giménez: Democrats agree with a lot of what communism is about.
“Two U.S. Representatives try to explain unauthorized visit to Kabul” via Catie Edmondson of The New York Times — Reps. Seth Moulton, Democrat of Massachusetts, and Peter Meijer, Republican of Michigan, stunned Washington when they secretly flew to Kabul on Tuesday on an unauthorized mission to witness the evacuation of Americans and Afghans. In an interview, Moulton and Meijer said the trip had changed their minds about Biden’s Aug. 31 deadline for a full withdrawal, which they had previously urged the administration to extend. Given that there is little chance that all Americans and Afghan allies can be evacuated in the next two weeks, they said, a swift departure is the only way for the United States to ensure that the Taliban will cooperate in eventually getting those left behind to safety.
“Restaurants plead with Congress for more help” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The delta variant-driven summer surge of COVID-19 is starting again to discourage people from going out to eat, leaving restaurants very concerned and pleading for more help from Congress. “We concluded that a majority of consumers have changed their dining behavior in a manner that is beginning to put acute pressure back on the restaurant industry,” National Restaurant Association Executive Vice President Sean Kennedy wrote in a letter Tuesday to congressional leaders. Dozens of state restaurant associations, including the Florida Restaurant & Lodging Association, co-signed the letter seeking another round of relief money.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Robert Blackmon spent least per vote among top mayoral candidates” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Blackmon proved to have the most bang for his buck Tuesday night after securing a spot on the Nov. 2 General Election ballot for St. Petersburg Mayor, spending about $3 less per vote as his General Election opponent Ken Welch. The two ousted six other candidates in Tuesday’s Primary Election. Blackmon spent about $15 per vote in his favor after dishing out a total of $229,467 between his campaign and political committee, Prosperous St. Pete. On the other hand, Welch spent about $18 per vote between his campaign and his affiliated political committee, Pelican PAC. Welch spent $402,173 leading up to the Primary Election.
“Behind the Florida condo collapse: Rampant corner-cutting” via Konrad Putzier, Scott Calvert and Rachael Levy of The Wall Street Journal — A startling discovery awaited an engineer who drilled into the ground-level concrete slab at Champlain Towers South last year. He could find no waterproofing in two separate sections. Without that essential layer, rainwater and salty sea spray likely had seeped in for decades, slowly weakening the steel rebar and concrete holding up the condo building. Indeed, the engineer reported at the time seeing significant concrete deterioration. Less than a year later, in the early hours of June 24, part of that slab dropped into the parking garage below. Within minutes, the east wing of the 13-story tower collapsed.
“Experts in Surfside condo collapse probe named, investigation likely to take years” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Leaders of a federal probe into what caused the Champlain Towers South condominium to collapse two months ago have announced key experts who will head up different parts of the complex project, which is likely to take years. The National Institute of Standards and Technology investigation is meant to provide a “third-party perspective focused on the science,” NIST Director James Olthoff said Wednesday. He told reporters his organization aims to get to the bottom of why the residential tower in Surfside fell June 24, killing 98, but it won’t assign blame.
“Building owned by Surfside Mayor has needed fixes for years. He blames permit delays” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — While Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett manages building-safety issues in the town where the Champlain Towers South condo collapsed, an apartment building Burkett owns in neighboring Miami Beach has a lingering problem of its own. It’s been nearly four years since Miami Beach’s Building Department issued an “Unsafe Structures” violation for the Lois Apartments at 2001 Bay Dr. in Normandy Isle after a tree fell and damaged four of its balconies during Hurricane Irma in 2017. The balconies were never fixed and have been boarded up. From the outside, exposed rebar is visible in one balcony’s railings, tied together with rope. In the balcony one floor up, more than half the railing is gone.
“Flagler Sheriff’s general counsel resigns amid questions about her ‘White Noise’ videos” via Frank Fernandez of The Daytona Beach News-Journal — The general counsel for the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office resigned Tuesday after The News-Journal asked about a series of “More Than White Noise” videos she had posted on the conservative online platform Rumble. In some of the videos, Theresa Pontieri, who is white, disparaged the Black Lives Matter movement. In one video, she referred to a Black girl who Ohio police fatally shot as “thuggy.” In another video, she said she did not condone but understood why those who stormed the U.S. Capitol Building on Jan. 6 were angry that then-Vice President Mike Pence was not supporting Trump‘s assertion without evidence that the election was stolen from him.
— TOP OPINION —
“Biden’s rush to the Afghan exits” via The Wall Street Journal editorial board — Some readers were upset by our editorial last week: “Biden to Afghanistan: Drop Dead.” But that headline looks more sadly accurate than ever after Biden’s decision Tuesday to stick to his arbitrary Aug. 31 deadline for withdrawing all U.S. troops from Afghanistan. Unless you’re Nancy Pelosi or a media partisan, there’s no sugarcoating what this means. Biden is bowing to Taliban demands, reiterated on Tuesday, not to extend the deadline. He is rejecting the advice of such G-7 leaders as Britain’s Boris Johnson and Emmanuel Macron of France to stay longer to get more people out of the country safely. And he is abandoning thousands of Afghans who fought with the U.S. and NATO to the Taliban’s brand of retribution.
— OPINIONS —
“How Florida’s massive COVID-19 spike got so bad” via Dylan Scott of Vox — Florida leads all states in the number of hospitalizations and deaths per capita. The Florida health department asked the federal government to send more ventilators as the number of hospitalized patients spiked, a request DeSantis claimed to know nothing about. Experts said the state’s policies, which have signaled to the vaccinated and unvaccinated alike that it’s OK to go about their normal lives, are making it easier for the virus to spread. The situation has led to a sort of theater of the absurd, with DeSantis fighting local mitigation measures while at the same time promoting new treatments for people who get so sick, they need to be hospitalized because of COVID-19.
“Florida must maintain its right and responsibility to protect our water supply” via Sen. Ben Albritton for The Fort Myers News-Press — Last week, the federal government declared a water shortage on the Colorado River, cutting off water to residents and businesses in Arizona and Nevada. Florida could face a similar fate if we’re not thoughtful about caring for and protecting our water resources. And that includes maintaining the state’s fundamental right to allocate our water resources to meet the needs of our citizens, our businesses and our environment. Unfortunately, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is considering a misguided plan that will surrender Florida’s right to control its water supply in Lake Okeechobee. This irreversible action would jeopardize the sustainability of the freshwater supply for a major part of our state.
“Forget feeding needy kids. Florida is busy fighting over masks and transgender sports” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — By now, you probably know DeSantis is waging a lot of wars over kids these days. He doesn’t want them to have to wear masks in school. And he wants to stop transgender kids from playing on the sports teams they want. Well, now it appears the Governor also doesn’t want some of Florida’s poorest children to have access to food stamps that most other states have embraced. We’re talking about a one-time federal benefit of $375 — a piddly portion of the trillion-dollar pandemic relief plan meant to help feed needy Americans. It’s possible to be conservative and compassionate. To realize it makes no sense to dole out pandemic relief to struggling businesses while denying it to hungry children.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
The trial over the Governor’s ban on mask mandates enters its fourth day. A group of parents is challenging DeSantis’ prohibition on mask mandates, and they’re asking the tough questions. They really didn’t have answers.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— A new poll from Quinnipiac shows 60% of Floridians support mask mandates, and two-thirds of them say masking up is about public health; only a third say is about individual freedom. But don’t tell that to the Governor … he’s still ticked off at the districts that opposed his emergency order
— They talk about mandatory masks, but there’s a loophole: All it takes is a note from the doctor. And a Tallahassee physician is banned from his hospital for offering notes for $50 apiece.
— DeSantis held another news conference to open a Regeneron treatment center, but his medical adviser says don’t forget to get vaccinated.
— And finally, a Florida Man got his job back after being fired for using the N-word.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Warner Bros. reveals new footage of ‘The Matrix 4’ and ‘The Batman’ at CinemaCon” via Robert Marich of Variety — Taking a low-key approach, Warner Bros. presented new footage Tuesday for its theatrical slate over the next seven months at exhibitors’ confab CinemaCon in Las Vegas. The studio’s reel included new footage of “The Batman” starring Robert Pattinson and the opening sequence for “The Many Saints of Newark” that is a prequel to “The Sopranos.” A glimpse at the first trailer for “The Matrix 4” was also revealed, along with its title: “The Matrix: Resurrections.” Beyond the near-term theatrical slate, Warner Bros. teased that five movie adaptations of its DC Comics properties are expected down the road.
“Target is adding Disney mini-shops to more stores, just in time for the holiday season” via Christopher Burch of NJ.com — The big-box retailer announced it will add the Disney Store at Target to at least 100 additional stores. The exact locations have yet to be announced. There are currently 53 Disney mini-shops inside Target stores, along with an online store. “As Target’s partnership with Disney continues to be a major hit, guests will find top toys from popular Disney properties,” a statement said. Target and Disney are not the only popular retailers to team up this year: An Ulta Beauty-Target partnership is on the horizon; Toys ‘R’ Us mini-shops are coming to Macy’s; the Sephora at Kohl’s concept launched earlier this month.
“Director Barry Jenkins is the travel nerd’s travel nerd” via Scott McCartney of The Wall Street Journal — Jenkins, Oscar-winning writer, director and producer, is also a proud aviation geek with a strong Twitter following among travelers. He reposts turbulence maps, comments on strange routes that airplanes take around storms, and even gives advice on travel bags. His eye is far more discerning than the average road warrior’s. He’ll call out the perfect seat-height-to-window ratio on a plane and the worst layout of business-class cabins (seats angled with a passenger’s back to the window). Sometimes he becomes so fascinated with how light plays with clouds that he’ll make a short video, set it to the music he’s listening to, and share it on Twitter.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Best wishes to Sen. George Gainer, our friend Joy Friedman, as well as Doug Adkins, Christian Camara, Jonathan Rees, Kayleigh Sagonowsky, and Jared Willis.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Good Thursday morning! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,461 words … 5½ minutes. Edited by Fadel Allassan.
🚨 Bulletin: The U.S., British and Australian governments warn today of a “high threat” of a terrorist attack at Kabul’s airport. The U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan issued this security alert:
- “Because of security threats outside the gates of Kabul airport, we are advising U.S. citizens to avoid traveling to the airport.” Get the latest.
White House chief of staff Ron Klain tweets that 95,000+ people have been evacuated in 11 days.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Vaccinated Americans are facing a disheartening reality: Even after getting the shot, we’ll have to live with some level of COVID risk for the foreseeable future, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes.
- A glut of data released over the past few weeks supports the idea that coronavirus vaccine effectiveness against infection begins to wane over time, although it remains effective against severe disease.
Most of the data suggest effectiveness is on the decline within six months post-vaccination.
- But the Biden administration plans to recommend a booster after eight months — which appears to still be well before effectiveness significantly wanes.
Between the lines: The U.S. vaccination campaign began in December. So millions of vaccinated Americans are likely significantly less protected than they were when they completed their shots.
- That’s not even accounting for the possibility that the vaccines are less effective against Delta.
💭 Caitlin’s thought bubble: I’m also trying to figure out what is a sustainable and ethical level of risk to incorporate into my life.
- As a low-risk person (young, healthy), my main fear isn’t getting the virus. It’s contributing to its spread among the unvaccinated and the vulnerable.
- That means I’m back to wondering whether I should dine indoors, struggling to make travel plans and taking coronavirus tests after being in what I perceive to be high-risk situations. These are all things I had hoped were behind me after I became fully vaccinated.
Soaring COVID cases across the U.S. are perpetuating a preventable wave of suffering that’s already straining hospitals And an average of 1,000 Americans are dying per day, Axios’ Sam Baker writes.
- The U.S. is now averaging over 150,000 new coronavirus cases per day — a 22% increase over the past two weeks.
- Infections are rising in 46 states — all but Maine + the triad of Missouri, Louisiana and Arkansas, where summer cases flew off the charts.
Between the lines: The biggest increases are happening primarily in a cluster of states where vaccination rates are low and safety measures like masks are spotty.
- Tennessee had the biggest spikes in the number of new cases, followed closely by a cluster of nearby Southeastern states as well as Alaska, South Dakota and Wyoming.
Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios
President Biden is enlisting Big Tech in defending against a growing wave of cyberattacks, which have become too big a problem for government alone.
- A White House summit yesterday included CEOs of Apple, Google, Amazon, Microsoft and IBM, and concluded with a raft of announcements of new cybersecurity projects and spending plans.
Between the lines: That’s awkward! The White House wants to partner with the tech companies — while also pursuing them with antitrust lawsuits and investigations, Axios’ Scott Rosenberg and Ina Fried note.
- Biden’s meeting can be seen as a signal from Washington to industry that it needs to take strong voluntary action — or face a new wave of regulatory or legislative mandates.
A flurry of administration and business announcements followed the summit:
- Microsoft said it would spend an additional $20 billion over five years on “security by design,” and offer $150 million in technical services to federal, state and local governments.
- Google plans to spend $10 billion over five years on zero-trust programs and other measures to bolster software supply chains and open-source security.
- Amazon said it would offer the public free access to the same “security awareness training” it provides its employees.
- IBM said it would train 150,000 people in cybersecurity skills over three years and partner with 20 historically Black colleges and universities to create cybersecurity leadership centers.
- Apple said it was starting a new program to enhance supply chain security.
The catch: Many in industry believe that baked-in government rules could hamstring companies trying to adapt to a rapidly changing cybersecurity environment.
What we’re watching: The summit also covered ways to protect supply chains and critical infrastructure and cyber insurance for businesses.
- There’s a pressing shortage of workers in the sector, where “nearly half a million public and private cybersecurity jobs remain unfilled,” according to a White House statement.
Go deeper: List of private-sector announcements after White House summit.
U.S. Air Force pilots help board people being evacuated from Afghanistan on an Air Force C-17 Globemaster III, at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul on Tuesday.
The U.S. has evacuated 80,000+ people from Kabul since Aug. 14, most of them Afghans. Axios World editor Dave Lawler maps the journey:
- Most U.S. military flights out of Kabul go to one of three hubs — in Qatar, Bahrain or Germany. Secondary sites are in the UAE and Kuwait, and at U.S. military installations in Germany, Italy and Spain.
Those who hold U.S. visas or have completed the Special Immigrant Visa application process can be quickly cleared to come to the U.S.
- It remains unclear how long others might wait. The administration is dispatching diplomats as well as intelligence, law enforcement and counterterrorism officials to expedite the process.
Those who are cleared to travel to the U.S. are being flown to Dulles, then on to one of four U.S. military bases — in New Jersey, Texas, Virginia and Wisconsin. Additional U.S. bases are expected to be added.
Jan. 6 committee chair Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.). Photo: Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call via Getty Images
The Jan. 6 select committee made a sweeping records request to the National Archives and federal agencies:
- Lawmakers demanded detailed records about former President Trump’s every movement and meeting on the day of insurrection.
The requests “show that as they ramp up their inquiry, investigators are looking closely at … any connections [Trump] or his administration had to the rioters,” writes The New York Times’ Luke Broadwater (subscription).
- “They are also looking into the potential involvement of at least one top aide to a Republican member of Congress who helped publicize the ‘Stop the Steal’ rallies,” The Times reports.
Cover: William Morrow
On Feb. 15, one of Nixon’s closest aides will break his silence:
- Dwight Chapin, who went to prison as a result of Watergate, was Nixon’s body man and traveling companion in the 1960s … a protégé of Bob Haldeman … and as a White House aide was responsible for the logistics of events ranging from Nixon’s meeting with Elvis to the opening to China with Henry Kissinger.
The publisher, William Morrow, says Chapin’s upcoming memoir, “The President’s Man,” will take reader behind the scenes with history makers including Coretta Scott King, LBJ, Hubert Humphrey, Sen. Ted Kennedy, Leonid Brezhnev, Chairman Mao, Frank Sinatra, and Roger Ailes.
Steve Coll plans a final volume in his panoramic and investigative series on the U.S. misadventure in Central Asia, Penguin Press says:
- The trilogy began with “Ghost Wars,” the Pulitzer-Prize winning account that traced the CIA’s covert war against Soviet occupation during the 1980s, through the rise of the Taliban and Osama bin Laden, to the eve of the 9/11 attacks.
- “Directorate S,” winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award, opened on 9/11 and carried the history through 2016, to the eve of Donald Trump’s election to the White House.
- The new work (no date set) will follow from there to the fall of Kabul and beyond.
Photo: Michael J. LeBrecht II/NBA via Getty Images
ESPN is removing longtime basketball reporter Rachel Nichols from all NBA coverage, and canceling her daily show “The Jump,” reports Sports Business Journal (subscription).
- The drama comes a month after The New York Times posted leaked audio of Nichols, who is white, suggesting that her Black colleague Maria Taylor was chosen to lead ESPN’s NBA finals coverage instead of her because the network was “feeling pressure” on diversity.
Ben Jackson, a sheep farmer stuck in lockdown in New South Wales, Australia, was unable to attend his aunt Deb’s funeral. So he honored her with sheep herded into the shape of a heart.
- This shot is from drone video of pregnant ewes munching barley in his paddock.
Jackson started experimenting with making shapes with sheep to relieve the monotonous stress of hand-feeding livestock during a devastating drought across most of Australia, AP reports.
- He discovered that if he spelled the names of his favorite musical bands with grain dropped from the back of a truck, the flock would roughly adopt the same shape for several minutes.
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Pritzker to order statewide mask mandate, vaccine requirement for K-12 staff
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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: Biden’s Thursday: Kabul terror threat, Iran and refugees
DRIVING THE DAY
Today is the kind of day that candidate JOE BIDEN said he was uniquely prepared for.
Congress is gone, domestic policy has been momentarily pushed aside, and global crises are colliding. President Biden awakens to the burden of his promises with an uncharacteristically busy public schedule completely focused on foreign policy.
He receives an update on the situation in Afghanistan from his national security team in the morning, has two bilateral meetings with new Israeli PM NAFTALI BENNETT before noon and hosts a late-afternoon Zoom with governors who have volunteered to help resettle Afghan refugees.
AFGHANISTAN — There’s a bipartisan critique in Congress that Biden should extend the Tuesday deadline for evacuating Afghanistan and removing all American troops. As with a lot of stateside commentary about what’s going on, the argument has lagged behind what the administration says is happening on the ground.
— Over the last 24 hours, we seem to have entered a “system was blinking red” moment with respect to threats against crowds and military personnel at Hamid Karzai International Airport.
— The Brits warned of “an ongoing and high threat of terrorist attack,” while the Australian government described a “very high threat of terrorist attack.”
— On Wednesday night, the U.S. Embassy in Kabul joined them and issued this alarming security alert: “Because of security threats outside the gates of Kabul airport, we are advising U.S. citizens to avoid traveling to the airport and to avoid airport gates at this time unless you receive individual instructions from a U.S. government representative to do so. U.S. citizens who are at the Abbey Gate, East Gate, or North Gate now should leave immediately.”
— At least 1,500 American citizens remain in Afghanistan, and the “State Department is frantically trying to track [them] down” ahead of the Tuesday deadline, reports the NYT, while “tens of thousands of Afghan allies will all but certainly be left behind.” Of those 1,500 Americans, “U.S. officials are trying to evacuate 500 … and are in contact with them,” says the WSJ. “The status of another 1,000 civilian Americans is unclear.”
We couldn’t help but notice these two very different responses to the situation from House members:
— Iraq War veteran Reps. SETH MOULTON (D-Mass.) and PETER MEIJER (R-Mich.) were roundly condemned for their stealth fact-finding mission to Kabul. But what hasn’t received nearly as much coverage is that when they returned, they reported that the trip had changed their minds, and both now agreed with the Biden administration about the prudence of sticking to the Tuesday deadline.
In a joint interview with the NYT’s Catie Edmondson, Moulton said this: “Almost every veteran in Congress wants to extend the Aug. 31 deadline, including us, and our opinion on that was changed on the ground, because we started the evacuations so late. There’s no way we can get everyone out, even by Sept. 11. So we need to have a working relationship with the Taliban after our departure. And the only way to achieve that is to leave by Aug. 31.”
They are clearly not happy with how Biden handled this. But they were chastened enough by the facts on the ground to change their minds about the policy going forward — and they’re now off Team “Extend the Deadline.”
— There was a very different reaction from Reps. ANTHONY GONZALEZ (R-Ohio) and ABIGAIL SPANBERGER (D-Va.), who did not travel to Kabul, but on Wednesday night secured the backing of the 58-member House Problem Solvers Caucus to endorse an extension:
“[I]t is apparent that the Administration’s set date for departure from Afghanistan on August 31st does not provide enough time to evacuate all American citizens and our partners. We respectfully call on the Administration to reconsider its timeline and provide a clear plan to Congress that will result in the completion of our shared national objectives.” Read the full statement
BIDEN MEETS BENNETT — Meanwhile, when Biden sits down with Bennett in the Oval Office, the two leaders will have their work cut out for them in repairing a damaged bilateral relationship. Biden is one of a dwindling band of older Democratic leaders holding back a tide of younger progressives who want the U.S. to adopt a much tougher line with Israel.
The Jerusalem Post notes there is just one thing on Bennett’s mind: “Iran, Iran and more Iran.”
As if Biden didn’t have enough on his plate, Bennett, who heads a shaky coalition and is a neophyte on the world stage, has made it clear in recent days that Israel wants Biden to drop any plans for a return to the Iran nuclear agreement that former President DONALD TRUMP tore up, and instead back Israel’s plan for a potential military option to degrade the Iranian program.
On the big issues, Biden is as far apart with Bennett as he was with former PM BENJAMIN NETANYAHU.
In an interview with the NYT this week, Bennett “said he would expand West Bank settlements that Mr. Biden opposes, declined to back American plans to reopen a consulate for Palestinians in Jerusalem and ruled out reaching a peace agreement with the Palestinians under his watch.”
Haaretz notes that Bennett will be facing an uphill battle: “Israel, the Palestinians and Iran are low on the Biden administration’s political agenda. Washington’s attention during this presidential term will be focused mainly on its confrontation with China, the coronavirus pandemic and the climate crisis. Last week, the upheaval in Afghanistan was added to all of this.”
Good Thursday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The ACLU and Families Against Mandatory Minimums are launching a six-figure ad campaign urging Biden to use his clemency power to help thousands of people who are currently serving home confinement under the CARES Act but are at risk of being sent back to prison. The ads will air on national news channels like CNN and MSNBC and will also be up in Delaware during Biden’s upcoming Labor Day vacation.
WATCH: Pelosi’s standoff with House moderates: Earlier this week, the House voted to advance Biden’s $3.5 trillion spending plan, a move that ended a tense standoff between Speaker NANCY PELOSI and a group of House moderates. So what happened behind closed doors that led to a resolution between the policymakers? This week, Ryan breaks down their discussion and what’s to come in the next month, as Congress is faced with multiple looming legislation deadlines.
BIDEN’S THURSDAY:
— 8:30 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 9:15 a.m.: Biden will meet with his national security team on Afghanistan.
— 11:30 a.m.: Biden will hold a bilateral meeting with Bennett in the Oval Office, followed by an expanded bilateral meeting at 11:55 a.m.
— 3 p.m.: Biden will virtually meet with a bipartisan group of governors who have volunteered to help house and resettle evacuated Afghans in their states.
The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 10:30 a.m. Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at noon.
THE SENATE and THE HOUSE are out.
PLAYBOOK READS
AFGHANISTAN LATEST
CHAOS IS A LADDER — “Afghanistan’s a sh*tshow. But for K Street, it’s an opportunity,” by Hailey Fuchs, Daniel Lippman and Caitlin Oprysko: “The Taliban takeover of Afghanistan this month has added a new level of activity to the K Street-Mideast nexus, leaving countries anxious and uncertain and lobbying shops hustling to their aid. … A few lobbying firms … have already reached out to pitch their services to ALI NAZARY, Afghan resistance leader AHMAD MASSOUD’s head of foreign relations and spokesperson. But Nazary declined to say which firms had contacted him, citing non-disclosure agreements he had signed.”
VIRTUOUS SIGNALING — “‘Anyone Got Any Helos Sitting Around?’: How a Private Network Is Using a Messaging App to Rescue Afghans,” by Erik Edstrom for POLITICO Magazine: “Had the U.S. government planned for this evacuation properly, the efforts of those supporting #AfghanEvac would have been wholly unnecessary. But instead, as one volunteer describes it, while working to rescue the relatives of an Afghan-American who is currently serving in the U.S. Army, we have ‘Saving Private Ryan: Kabul Edition.’”
CREATING A VISA BOTTLENECK — “Anti-Immigrant Trump Aide Stephen Miller Laid Groundwork For Disastrous Afghan Evacuation,” by HuffPost’s S.V. Date: “[STEPHEN] MILLER, who worked for all four years as former President Donald Trump’s immigration adviser pushing restrictive policies across the board, was instrumental in slowing down the processing of Special Immigrant Visas (SIV) for Afghan interpreters, embassy staff and others who are now top targets for Taliban assassination, according to both refugee advocates and those who have worked with him. …
“OLIVIA TROYE, who worked in the White House for former Vice President MIKE PENCE, said Miller had a knack for using the bureaucracy to effect his agenda. ‘He does it in a very crafty way. You can trace the steps of everything he did along the way,’ she said, describing how Miller was even able to use the Covid-19 pandemic to slow down the processing of SIV applications. ‘This was just another opportunity to push his anti-immigration agenda.’”
THE WHITE HOUSE
THE I.T. CROWD — “Biden Says Cybersecurity Is the ‘Core National Security Challenge’ at CEO Summit,” by WSJ’s Dustin Volz and David Uberti: “Biden hosted executives from major technology, financial and energy companies on Wednesday for a summit on national cybersecurity, calling the issue ‘the core national security challenge we are facing.’ Top tech executives, including Apple Inc.’s TIM COOK, Amazon.com Inc.’s ANDY JASSY, Microsoft Corp.’s SATYA NADELLA and Alphabet Inc.’s SUNDAR PICHAI attended the White House meeting, according to a list of participants shared by an administration official. The guest list also included JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO JAMIE DIMON and BRIAN MOYNIHAN, president and CEO of Bank of America Corp., among other representatives of the financial industry.”
CONGRESS
FEELING THE BERN — “$3.5T or bust? Sanders goes all-out to protect Dems’ social spending plans,” by Burgess Everett: “[Sen. BERNIE] SANDERS understands that there will be changes to his vision given the party’s slim majorities in each chamber, now that the blueprint is approved. But as Senate moderates propose chipping away at the $3.5 trillion price tag, he’s in no mood to haggle on the top line number. …
“The Vermont senator is barnstorming conservative Iowa and Indiana this weekend to sell Democrats’ sweeping visions … He’s also expected to host an event in Michigan … Yet as he seeks to increase support among working class Republicans across the country, Sanders also must ensure he can keep his fellow 49 Democratic Caucus members on board in D.C. It’s part of an inside-outside game Sanders has worked on for years.”
MCCARTHY’S AFGHANISTAN TIGHTROPE — “The Latest G.O.P. Schism: How to Handle Afghan Evacuees,” by NYT’s Annie Karni: “The unusual split is pitting traditional conservatives, who are more inclined to defend those who have sacrificed for America, against the anti-immigrant, anti-refugee wing of the party. … On the issue of Afghan refugees, [House Minority Leader KEVIN] MCCARTHY has walked the same tightrope that he has on other issues, trying to appease the two sides of the party. He has stated publicly that ‘we owe it to these people, who are our friends and who worked with us, to get them out safely if we can.’ But he has also leaned into the nativist, Trumpian side, giving voice to the generalized, inchoate fears about foreigners entering the country.”
TWO MORE MEMBERS PLANNED KABUL TRIPS — “U.S. leaders move to shut down further freelance trips to Kabul,” by WaPo’s Annie Linskey, Paul Kane, Alex Horton and Tyler Pager: “Leaders in the Biden administration and on Capitol Hill took steps Wednesday to discourage members of Congress from taking further unauthorized trips to Kabul … as two other lawmakers were heading toward Afghanistan on Wednesday, according to a Biden administration official who was not authorized to discuss their plans. The official said the House members, whose names could not be confirmed, were in Europe and had requested passage to Afghanistan. The Pentagon rejected the request, the official said.”
PANDEMIC
STATISTIC OF THE DAY — “About 15% of all Mississippi K-12 students have now been quarantined since the start of the [school] year either for testing positive for COVID-19 or due to known exposures,” per the Mississippi Free Press.
BOOSTER SHOTS COMING SOONER — “Federal regulators are likely to approve a Covid-19 booster shot for vaccinated adults starting at least six months after the previous dose rather than the eight-month gap they previously announced,” report WSJ’s Stephanie Armour and Jared Hopkins.
AWFUL MILESTONE — “Hospitalizations hit 100,000 in United States for first time since January,” WaPo
THE HOT ZONE — “In Florida, the pandemic is worse now than it has ever been before,” by NYT’s Dan Levin: “The average for new known cases [in Florida] reached 23,314 a day on the weekend, 30 percent higher than the state’s previous peak in January.”
TRYING TO OUT-DESANTIS DESANTIS — “Gov. Greg Abbott bans mandates on Covid-19 vaccines regardless of whether they have full FDA approval,” by Texas Tribune’s Patrick Svitek
POLITICS ROUNDUP
2022 WATCH — “GOP faces hurdles in push to make Afghanistan matter in the midterms,” by Olivia Beavers and Andrew Desiderio: “Absent an all-consuming global conflagration, voters tend to cast their ballots based on domestic rather than foreign priorities … Beyond the calendar, Republicans have other messaging bumps to overcome as they try to keep Biden’s Afghanistan problems top of mind.
“Those include the small but vocal minority of Republicans who have stoked fears about thousands of Afghan allies being resettled across the U.S., undermining the party’s attempts at a more welcoming message. Then there’s the handful of GOP Donald Trump critics who, as they hit the Biden administration, are also pinning some blame back on the former president, who negotiated a similar withdrawal timeline with the Taliban.”
RECALL ME MAYBE — “‘Stakes are extremely high.’ Results of Gavin Newsom recall could ripple across nation,” by McClatchy’s Alex Roarty: “‘It’s one of these moments that people outside of California are doing a double take and saying, “Wait a second, how are we even having a conversation about a Republican winning in California?”’ said TYLER LAW, a Democratic strategist. … A Republican victory in a state where the GOP hasn’t held statewide office in more than a decade would send shockwaves through the country, Newsom advisers say.
“‘It really is a bellwether for ‘22,’ said SEAN CLEGG, [a senior strategist for Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM]. ‘We have a turnout problem. The recall is all about the turnout challenge. And whether we’re successful or unsuccessful has huge national implications.’”
— “‘A crazy way to run a state’: Democrats feel helpless on recall ballot’s second question,” by L.A. Times’ Julia Wick
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
REPROACH THE KRAKEN — “Sidney Powell, Kraken legal team face sanctions, court costs and potential disbarment over election lawsuit,” by Detroit Free Press’ Dave Boucher: “The punishments foreshadow far more potentially devastating problems for SIDNEY POWELL, LIN WOOD and a cadre of other attorneys who used their so-called ‘Kraken’ lawsuit to push a false claim that an international cabal worked to steal the election away from Trump in Michigan and several other states.”
— From U.S. District Judge LINDA PARKER’s opinion: “This case was never about fraud — it was about undermining the people’s faith in our democracy and debasing the judicial process to do so.” The full 110-page ruling
FIRST WHITMER PLOTTER SENTENCED — “Man who plotted to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer sentenced to over 6 years,” by NBC’s Pete Williams
VALLEY TALK
MOVE FAST AND BREAK THINGS — “Facebook Said to Consider Forming an Election Commission,” by NYT’s Ryan Mac, Mike Isaac and Sheera Frenkel: “Facebook has approached academics and policy experts about forming a commission to advise it on global election-related matters, said five people with knowledge of the discussions, a move that would allow the social network to shift some of its political decision-making to an advisory body.
“The proposed commission could decide on matters such as the viability of political ads and what to do about election-related misinformation, said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the discussions were confidential. Facebook is expected to announce the commission this fall in preparation for the 2022 midterm elections, they said, though the effort is preliminary and could still fall apart.”
MEDIAWATCH
THE BUZZ ON BEZOS, BARON AND BUZBEE — “Inside the Plan to Make Jeff Bezos’s Washington Post the Everything Newspaper,” by Washingtonian’s Andrew Beaujon. “A widespread theory among some who felt unconsidered in the search process or disappointed in its result is that [SALLY] BUZBEE hadn’t pined for the job until [publisher FRED] RYAN recruited her into the bake-off. The thinking goes that [executive editor MARTY] BARON, who preceded both Ryan and [WaPo owner JEFF] BEZOS at the paper, never had a clear incentive to listen to Ryan, and by shepherding Buzbee’s candidacy, Ryan not only would be known for a first, but he’d finally have an executive editor who owed him. Ryan allows that the search did involve ‘very aggressive outreach’ but declines to get into specifics about the process.”
— Inside Bezos’ Kalorama palace: “They supped … off dishes emblazoned with the Post logo and [took] questions from the world’s richest man about how they might run his newspaper. The plates weren’t the only piece of Post swag Bezos showed off — according to two sources, he also told guests he owns a lock busted by the Watergate burglars.”
MISC.
LAW AND ORDER — “Sirhan Sirhan, convicted of Robert F. Kennedy assassination, seeks parole with no opposition from prosecutors,” by WaPo’s Tom Jackman
PLAYBOOKERS
IN MEMORIAM — “Time Magazine Writer, Joseph J. Kane, 84, Dies”
STAFFING UP — The White House announced that Biden is tapping Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett as ambassador to Luxembourg, Carla Koppell as assistant USAID administrator for development, democracy and Innovation and Liz Allen as assistant secretary of State for global public affairs.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Katherine Schneider will be comms director for Sen. Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.). She most recently was deputy comms director for Sen. Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.).
MEDIA MOVE — Kevin Hall is now North America editor for the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project. He previously was chief economic correspondent and senior investigator for McClatchy D.C. More from Talking Biz News
TRUMP ALUMNI — Mallory Blount is now press secretary and director of strategic comms for Herschel Walker’s Georgia Senate campaign. She most recently was press secretary for Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, and is a Trump White House alum.
TRANSITIONS — Gillum Ferguson is joining Baker Group Strategies as director of comms and media and head of the D.C. office. He most recently was deputy comms director for Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.). … Luke Ball is now comms director for Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-N.C.). He most recently was comms director for Rep. Pat Fallon (R-Texas) and is a Matt Gaetz alum. …
… Spencer Silverman is now director of direct voter contact in Axiom Strategies’ D.C. office. He previously was deputy campaign manager for House GOP Conference Chair Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.), and is an RNC and Trump 2016 alum. … Julia Savel is joining the public affairs team at DKC. She previously was a spokesperson for Maya Wiley’s NYC mayoral campaign and is an Elaine Luria alum.
WEEKEND WEDDING — Sophie White, an incoming associate at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher and a Claire McCaskill alum, and Eric Wall, an incoming associate at Davis, Polk & Wardwell and a Chris Coons and FINRA alum, got married in a small courthouse ceremony in Annapolis on Friday. The couple met in the Senate. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: USA Today’s David Jackson (62) … Miriam Elder … Bob Barnett … Oracle’s Josh Pitcock … former DHS Secretary Tom Ridge of Ridge Global … Amanda Wood … Eddie Vale of New Paradigm Agency … Jennifer Sherman of Reservoir Communications Group … Business Insider’s Nicole Gaudiano … POLITICO’s Quint Forgey, Jordan Muller and Maeve Sheehey … Patrick Dorton of Rational 360 … CAP Action Fund’s Navin Nayak … Interior’s Tiffany Cox … The New Republic’s Grace Segers … Gara LaMarche … Rebekah Jorgensen Hoshiko … White House’s Kailash Sundaram … Lindsey Curnutte … Justin Dillon … Satyam Khanna … Stephen Dubner … Brielle Appelbaum … Kirk Anderson of Accenture … Kiran Chetry … Ari Ratner … Jim Harris of Bain … Thomas Rice … Arthur MacMillan … Bill Whitaker … Devan Cayea of Sen. Alex Padilla’s (D-Calif.) office … Bloomberg’s Joe Weisenthal … Ilyse Hogue … Sean Sweeney … Harrison Cramer … Taylor Price of Everfi (36) … NBC’s Savannah Sellers … Myles Miller … Deidrea Miller … Seth Stein … Julian Epstein … Eric Fehrnstrom
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: MSM Aided and Abetted Biden’s Afghanistan Failure
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I’m having a floral print tuxedo custom-tailored for me just to mess with people’s heads. And it makes my eyes really pop.
Time isn’t what it used to be, is it? The last seven months feel like at least seven years right now. It’s difficult to believe even while staring at a calendar, but it was only two weeks ago that the situation in Afghanistan really began to spiral out of control. I had to double-check that because — again — it feels like a lot longer.
Add “making us all age prematurely” to the list of things Joe Biden is doing to ruin everything.
One of the more surreal aspects of this past fortnight has been the fact that we have witnessed some occasional acts of journalism being committed by the thoroughly loathsome members of the mainstream media. Most of us on this side of the aisle were convinced that they couldn’t even pull that off by accident anymore. Biden has been so awful in his handling of this latest crisis, however, that even his besties in the MSM began to sour on him in fairly short order.
This brief flirtation with journalistic integrity has some of the poor, fragile dears on the left in full diaper-soiling mode.
A.J. Kaufman had a delicious story yesterday about their meltdown:
Even conservatives concede the mainstream media has been relatively tough on the Biden administration’s Afghanistan debacle.
This leaves the president’s remaining vocal defenders perplexed and charging the press with effectively colluding with “national security elites” to be too tough on Biden.
First, White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain attacked CNN with pitiful dishonesty.
Zany Jen Rubin then told Washington Post readers the poor president is an easy target.
There’s more. Our sister site Twitchy had a story on Tuesday about a Democratic strategist having a full toddler tantrum and referring to Politico as — I kid you not — a “rightwing propaganda organization.”
While this summer barbecue spat among loved ones has been fun to watch, we can’t let it distract us from the fact that the MSM has been almost criminally complicit in all of the damage that Joe Biden has done, is doing now, and most certainly will continue doing to this country.
My Monday Briefing featured a story from the London Telegraph that called out the American media for its role in letting Biden get anywhere near the Oval Office.
A few days of the MSM hacks doing the work they should have been doing for decades doesn’t get them a free pass. Absolutely none of this would be happening if they hadn’t lied about President Trump for years, and then spent all of last year pretending it wasn’t obvious that Joe Biden had mentally checked out for good. Their abdication of journalistic responsibility has compromised this country in ways that can’t soon be forgiven.
Given the fact that Joe Biden hasn’t really been there for a long time, the American political media may be more culpable for the miserable state of the country right now than he is. They’ve been propping up the drooling idiot by essentially creating a fictitious character in their “reporting.” It may not be all on them, but a good chunk of it is.
Chuck Todd, Jake Tapper, and the rest of the hack propagandists in the MSM will no doubt soon return to their lapdog duties and start slobbering all over their Democrat masters again.
Yes, they’ve done some real work in the past week, but it hasn’t been enough to get them time off for good behavior.
Everything Isn’t Awful
Sticking with the cute animals. The world needs this.
PJ Media
My latest column: America Is Now Actually the Mess Dems Pretended It Was Under Trump
After Pornography Ban Reversal, Can Users and Creators Go Back to OnlyFans With a Clean Conscience?
VodkaPundit: Biden Is an ‘Impediment’ to Private Afghanistan Evacuations, ‘A Massive F*** Up’
[VIDEO] Raymond Ibrahim on When Constantinople Saved Western Civilization from Islam
Adorbz. The Left Accuses the Media of Warmongering After a Barely a Week of Biden Criticism
WATCH: Biden’s Appalling Response to a Question About Americans Stranded in Afghanistan
Two Reps, a Dem and a Republican, Went to Kabul Because They Don’t Trust Biden’s Afghanistan Spin
VodkaPundit, Part Deux: HYPOCRISY ALERT: Harris Praises McCain at Memorial Service in Vietnam
Even the Biden White House Thinks Kamala Harris Is Useless. Here’s How to Tell
Under the bus with you! Darth Cuomo’s REAL COVID-19 Death Count Revealed by New Governor
The Virus From a Communist Nation Is Turning the World Commie
SHAKE DOWN THE THUNDER…Woke Mob Puts Out Hit on Notre Dame’s Leprechaun
The Baby Who Appeared on Nirvana’s ‘Nevermind’ Album Cover Is Suing the Band for Child Pornography
Jen Psaki Hasn’t Earned the Right to Snark at Anyone
Kabul Airport: ‘Total, Complete Chaos, Unsanitary Conditions and Rapidly Declining,’ Rubio Warns
Joe Biden Is Now the World’s Top Arms Supplier to Terrorists
Canada’s ‘Minister for Women and Gender Equality’ Calls the Taliban ‘Our Brothers’
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: The Shame of the Never Trumpers
Larry O: How Not to Convince the Unvaccinated
Screw Biden: CIA and US Troops Are Conducting Rescue Operations to Evacuate Stranded Americans
Lin Wood and Sidney Powell Could Be Disbarred After Federal Judge Grants Sanctions Against Them
Kira: Trump’s Medical Pricing Transparency Policies Vindicated in Stunning New York Times Report
Yikes: CDC Seems to Have Covered up Data Showing Masking Kids in Schools Is Pointless
Taliban Declare They’re Going to Tackle Climate Change In Clear Attempt to Manipulate the Media
Report: Illinois Democrats Set to Give Adam Kinzinger Something to Really Cry About
Chicago Watchdog Slams Anti-Crime Tech Sold By David Chipman
Cam&Co. Los Angeles City Council Moves To Ban “Ghost Guns”
Editorial Makes Valid Point About “Responsible Gun Ownership”
Matt Taibbi: This Antifa attack on a reporter deserves more attention
Question for Jen Psaki: Is it still U.S. policy that we don’t negotiate with terrorists?
UW’s Black Student Union said a 42-ton rock offended them so the university moved it
VIP
The Kruiser Kabana Episode 145: I’m Tired of Living in ‘The Stand’
Afghanistan’s Fall to the Taliban Is Also Part of Barack Obama’s Legacy
Bureaucratic Lunacy Creates a Nightmare for Those Facing Eviction
Joe Biden Was ‘Reluctant’ to Rescue Americans in Kabul… for a Terrible Reason
The Biden Democrats’ New Spin on Afghanistan Is Their Most Cynical and Dishonest Yet
GOLD The Political Jihad Squad
GOLD DC Outsider Ep. 10: There Is No Debate…Biden Failed
Around the Interwebz
Spike Lee Says He Is Re-Editing 9/11 Chapter Of HBO’s ‘NYC Epicenters’ Amid Backlash
Misaligned factory robot may have sparked Chevy Bolt battery fires
How to ‘Renovate’ Your Living Room Without Spending Renovation Money
Meet the People Who Staff Argentina’s Highest Observatory
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Comedy
I don’t want a “Beyond Burger.” I want to move into the burger and stay there for-freaking-ever.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Mask Mandate Debate Heats Up
Plus: An update on the Afghan refugee situation.
The Dispatch Staff | 4 |
Happy Thursday! The Dispatch staff would like to extend our formal congratulations to the Baltimore Orioles, who defeated the Los Angeles Angels 10-6 last night and avoided breaking the record for longest losing streak in major league history.
Cheer up, Orioles—everyone has a bad game (or 19) now and then!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Wednesday that U.S. and coalition forces had evacuated approximately 19,000 people from Afghanistan over the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of people flown out of Kabul since August 14 to 82,300. According to the Biden administration’s analysis, between 500 and 1,500 Americans seeking evacuation remain in Afghanistan. Blinken said the administration has been “aggressively” reaching out to about 1,000 contacts who may be Americans, but noted some may no longer be in the country, have chosen to stay, or erroneously claimed to be American. The U.S. Embassy in Kabul issued an alert last night advising U.S. citizens to avoid traveling to the airport—or “leave immediately”—due to “security threats outside the gates.”
- Blinken added in his remarks that—contrary to their comments in recent days—Taliban leaders have made commitments to provide safe passage for Americans, third-country nationals, and Afghans at risk even past the Biden administration’s August 31 deadline. “There is no deadline on our work to help any remaining American citizens who decide they want to leave to do so, along with the many Afghans who have stood by us over these many years and want to leave and have been unable to do so,” Blinken said, though he argued the administration was still on pace to meet the deadline. “That effort will continue every day past August 31.”
- In a move choreographed earlier this week, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin issued a memo on Wednesday directing military leaders to “immediately begin” implementing a COVID-19 vaccine mandate for all servicemembers, approximately 800,000 of whom—according to Pentagon data—remain unvaccinated. Austin did not include a specific date by which service members must comply, but said secretaries of the military departments “should impose ambitious timelines for implementation.”
- Pfizer and BioNTech announced Wednesday they have begun the FDA supplemental application process necessary to get their Comirnaty (COVID-19 vaccine) booster shot approved. Phase III trial data, the companies said, showed a booster dose elicited more than three times the neutralizing antibodies in recipients than the second dose.
- Johnson & Johnson unveiled data on Wednesday that showed a booster dose of its COVID-19 vaccine “generated a rapid and robust increase in spike-binding antibodies, nine-fold higher than 28 days after the primary single-dose vaccination.” The pharmaceutical company said it is “engaging” with the FDA and CDC on next steps.
- U.S. District Judge Linda Parker issued a ruling Wednesday night ordering several pro-Trump lawyers—including Sidney Powell and Lin Wood—to face sanctions over their involvement in post-2020 election litigation, including potentially suspension or disbarment. “Attorneys have an obligation to the judiciary, their profession, and the public (i) to conduct some degree of due diligence before presenting allegations as truth; (ii) to advance only tenable claims; and (iii) to proceed with a lawsuit in good faith and based on a proper purpose. Attorneys also have an obligation to dismiss a lawsuit when it becomes clear that the requested relief is unavailable,” she wrote.
- A federal appeals court on Wednesday upheld the death sentence handed down to Dylann Roof in 2017 after he murdered nine black members of a Bible study at Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina in 2015. “His crimes qualify him for the harshest penalty that a just society can impose,” the three-judge panel wrote.
Biden Weighs In on Florida’s Mask-Mandate Debate
As America’s kids get back to school, an issue many had hoped to leave behind this spring—whether it’s necessary or prudent for kids and teachers to wear masks—is prompting yet another round of political clashes.
Last month, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis issued an executive order effectively banning Florida schools from requiring students to wear masks, arguing that masking decisions rightfully belonged to Florida parents. DeSantis argued that the order fell under the auspices of a new state law passed a month prior, known as the Parents’ Bill of Rights, which among other things granted a parent “the right to make health care decisions for his or her minor child, unless otherwise prohibited by law.”
Now, however, a number of Florida counties are moving forward with mandates in defiance of that order. Among them are many of the state’s largest districts, including the public schools of Miami-Dade, Broward, and Orange counties, meaning that more than half of the state’s students are starting school in districts where mandates are in place. The schools cited updated guidance from the CDC, which earlier this month resumed recommending that all students mask in school regardless of their vaccination status.
“Protecting our children must be a top priority as we continue to combat the serious threat of COVID-19,” Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said last week.
Last Friday, DeSantis’ Department of Education began notifying counties that they were in violation of the order and that their schools would face a loss of state funds equivalent to the salaries of their boards if they did not change course. Originally, the governor had threatened explicitly to revoke school board members’ salaries—a plan that failed to take into consideration the particular disbursement of the funds given to the school boards themselves.
Then, over the weekend, President Biden waded in and further complicated matters. “Let me be clear: We will do everything we can to support local school districts in safely reopening schools,” he tweeted. “American Rescue Plan funds can be used to backfill the salaries of the brave Florida school board members, superintendents, and other educators keeping our children safe.”
Update on the Afghan Refugee Process
As is often the case with foreign policy questions, logistics surrounding the evacuation of Kabul and eventual resettlement of thousands of Afghans have been distorted through the lens of Washington’s domestic political discourse.
Take, for instance, this claim from former President Donald Trump on Tuesday: “Biden surrendered Afghanistan to terrorists and left thousands of Americans for dead by pulling out the Military before our citizens. Now we are learning that out of the 26,000 people who have been evacuated, only 4,000 are Americans … Instead, we can only imagine how many thousands of terrorists have been airlifted out of Afghanistan and into neighborhoods around the world. What a terrible failure. NO VETTING. How many terrorists will Joe Biden bring to America? We don’t know!”
Several other pundits have peddled similar versions of the former president’s alarmism since Afghanistan’s fall, which raises fair questions: Which Afghans qualify for relocation to the U.S., how are they getting here, and what does the vetting process look like?
On Tuesday, Secretary Blinken held a press conference to update Americans about the ongoing airlifts from Hamid Karzai International Airport, which have evacuated more than 82,000 people since August 14. Approximately 45 percent of the evacuees are women and children.
“While evacuating Americans is our top priority, we’re also committed to getting out as many Afghans at risk as we can before the 31st. That starts with our locally employed staff, the folks who’ve been working side by side in our embassy with our diplomatic team,” Blinken said. “And it includes Special Immigrant Visa program participants and also other Afghans at risk. It’s hard to overstate the complexity and the danger of this effort.”
The two categories of Afghans being evacuated, broadly speaking, are those who qualify for the Afghan Special Immigrant Visa (SIV) program and “other vulnerable Afghans” identified by the U.S. State Department.
Worth Your Time
- As we mentioned in yesterday’s TMD, Reps. Seth Moulton and Peter Meijer traveled to Kabul earlier this week on an unauthorized trip to get a sense of how evacuation efforts were playing out on the ground. The move enraged the Biden administration, which argued the gambit led U.S. personnel to divert time and resources away from their mission. Meijer and Moulton spoke to Catie Edmondson at the New York Times on Wednesday to defend themselves—and share what they learned from their time at HKIA. “At the end of the day, the impact of our visit on ongoing operations, I believe, will pale in comparison to the impact of the visit,” Moulton said. “Almost every veteran in Congress wants to extend the Aug. 31 deadline, including us, and our opinion on that was changed on the ground, because we started the evacuations so late. There’s no way we can get everyone out, even by Sept. 11. So we need to have a working relationship with the Taliban after our departure. And the only way to achieve that is to leave by Aug. 31.”
- Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts died earlier this week at the age of 80, and rock historian Jack Hamilton has the best piece we’ve read on the band’s longtime heartbeat. “[Watts] wouldn’t have been anyone’s pick for the world’s most technically accomplished drummer,” he writes in Slate. “His chops were fine but unremarkable; his sense of time would never be mistaken for a metronome. It speaks to the wonder of music, and rock ’n’ roll music in particular, that these objective shortcomings were, in fact, crucial to what made him so great. … You can’t learn to play music like this; you’re born with those ears or you’re not. No one will ever play drums like Charlie Watts, the perfect drummer in what was, once upon a time, the perfect band.”
Presented Without Comment
Spencer Elden, who as a 4-month-old appeared naked on the cover of “Nevermind,” is suing Nirvana for child exploitation and pornography, saying the band knowingly distributed the photo and profited from it.
Toeing the Company Line
- On Wednesday’s Dispatch Podcast, Sarah, David, Jonah, and Steve discuss the United States’ impending deadline in Afghanistan, House Democrats’ rollercoaster week, the 2022 midterms, and Gov. Gavin Newsom’s political fate in California.
- Scott Lincicome’s latest Capitolism (🔒) examines America’s innumeracy problem—and how it often leads to bad policy. “The summer’s COVID-19 events have really hit home just how important an understanding of numbers and basic math concepts is to public policy and life more broadly,” he writes, pointing to the national debt, vaccine efficacy, and more. “Innumeracy can encourage cynical or unsavory people to try to profit—politically or financially (or both)—from Americans’ misunderstanding of basic, but important, statistics.”
- In yesterday’s G-File(🔒), Jonah reflects on his daughter’s leaving for college—and draws a parallel between helicopter parenting and certain forms of government. “Giving children the freedom to make mistakes is one of the hardest, but most important, requirements of parenting,” he writes. “And anyone who’s been a parent knows that, however difficult it is for us, it would be impossible for strangers. We will never have perfect knowledge about when or how to intervene in our kids’ lives, but we will always have a better idea than someone who doesn’t know them at all.”
- Because Jonah was doing the aforementioned dropping-off-at-college thing, David filled in for him on The Remnant yesterday, hosting a discussion with national security and technology policy expert Klon Kitchen. The two discuss whether the crisis unfolding in Afghanistan was avoidable, the United States’ frightening lack of preparedness for cyber threats, and how to reform Section 230, if at all.
- Khaya reports on the latest from Maricopa County. Election officials are trying to get ahead of a report on the unofficial audit of the county’s 2.1 million ballots that they anticipate will include misinformation. Cyber Ninjas, the company hired to carry out the review, was late turning in the complete report because of a COVID outbreak among staff.
- One country in particular aided the Taliban and al-Qaeda in its efforts in Afghanistan, and Danielle Pletka argues it’s high time for Pakistan to get the scrutiny it deserves—and for the U.S. to stop providing the country with so much aid.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— This week, we’re looking at redistricting in seven Midwest/Great Lakes states: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. — The highly competitive region was a collective nailbiter for president, and Republicans hold an overall House edge there, though not as large as earlier last decade. — Illinois is really the only large state where Democrats clearly should have unfettered gerrymandering power, but with a 13-5 edge already and one seat needing to be eliminated, they don’t have a ton of room to grow. But Democrats also will try to solidify some of the seats they already have. — Divided government in Minnesota, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin could very well mean courts have to get involved, while Michigan and Ohio are implementing new redistricting systems. Redistricting in the competitive Great LakesLet’s first start with an apology to Pennsylvania: yes, we know you are not actually part of the Midwest, as properly defined. The Keystone State is typically part of the Northeast. However, for political purposes, Pennsylvania belongs in the same category as several other states that at least partially touch the Great Lakes and are considered part of the Midwest: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin. Together, these seven states still represent a great presidential battleground, particularly in recent years. In 2004, Ohio was the decisive state in reelecting George W. Bush, even as he lost five of these other states in the process (holding only the Buckeye State and Indiana, consistently the most Republican state in the competitive Midwest). Four years later, Barack Obama swept all seven states, including Indiana, in his impressive national victory. In 2012, Obama held all but the Hoosier State as part of a smaller win. In 2016, Donald Trump performed extremely well in the region, with a 78,000-vote combined margin in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin the key to his win. In 2020, Joe Biden recaptured that trio, albeit narrowly, which played a vital role in his victory. While Biden won five of the seven states, the collective vote in the region was just 49.9%-48.3% for Biden. In a nation where the number of truly competitive states has been on the decline over the past several decades, the Great Lakes/Midwest states stand out for their vital swing role. In the last decade, the seven states were almost all gerrymandered. Republicans won major 2010 victories in Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, creating new governing trifectas in all five states and giving themselves total control over redistricting. Minnesota, as it so often has been, was split, while Democrats narrowly maintained control over Illinois, giving them redistricting power there. Republicans used this power largely to lock in their big 2010 gains, and while the Democratic gerrymander of Illinois proved effective, Republicans won 60% of the House seats in these seven states in 2012 (55 of 91 total) even as Obama won 53% of the regional two-party vote for president. Democrats have since netted an additional six seats in the region, cutting the GOP edge to 49-42, even as Trump outperformed Mitt Romney across the region. A major part of this was the unwinding of the Republican Pennsylvania gerrymander, forced by the Democratic-majority state Supreme Court, which contributed to the Democrats netting four seats during the 2018 cycle. As we go state by state, it’s obvious that a lot has changed in redistricting from 10 years ago. Republicans no longer have an edge in control: While Democrats retain their gerrymandering power in Illinois, Republicans still hold it only in Indiana and possibly Ohio (we add the caveat there because of Ohio’s new, potentially less partisan redistricting system, which we’ll describe below). Michigan has a new commission system, while Minnesota, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin have divided government. Courts are likely to be important players in several of these states. Let’s start with Illinois, which is the only one of the 13 states with 10 or more congressional districts nationally where Democrats appear to hold unequivocal gerrymandering power. ILLINOISNumber of seats: 17 (-1 from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 12-6 D Current party breakdown: 13-5 D Most overpopulated district: IL-7 (Downtown/West Side Chicago) Most underpopulated district: IL-17 (Northwest Illinois) Who controls redistricting: Democrats 2012 control: Democrats With a 13-5 edge in the Illinois U.S. House delegation already, Democrats are not going to be able to squeeze a ton more out of the Land of Lincoln. But they should be able to do better than they are doing now and, just as importantly, they should be able to better protect some of the competitive districts they already hold. As they draw the maps in Illinois, Democrats will be building off their gerrymander from a decade ago — one that worked out great for them in the long run of the decade, though not really as intended. Republicans won 11 of Illinois’s 19 House seats in 2010, but Democratic control of the state legislature paired with then-Gov. Pat Quinn’s (D) narrow victory allowed Democrats to draw the state’s map. They designed a map that they hoped would elect 13 Democrats and five Republicans. Democrats came up one seat short in 2012, as now-Rep. Rodney Davis (R, IL-13) narrowly held a central Illinois seat that covers the state capital, Springfield, as well as Champaign-Urbana, home of the flagship University of Illinois campus. Davis was pushed hard again in 2018, but he remains in office. Republicans struck back in 2014, winning the affluent and highly educated northern Chicago suburban district IL-10 as well as the ancestrally Democratic but Republican-trending IL-12 in southwest Illinois. Democrats won IL-10 back in 2016, and now-Reps. Sean Casten (D, IL-6) and Lauren Underwood (D, IL-14) flipped two of the five seats “reserved” for Republicans at the start of the decade by the Democratic gerrymander. Democrats held all 13 of their seats in 2020, although Underwood only won by a little over a point. Meanwhile, Rep. Cheri Bustos (D, IL-17) won her gerrymandered district consistently throughout the decade, but she only won by four points last year in the Obama-to-Trump district. She is retiring, complicating Democratic efforts to hold her seat. Illinois, one of the few states that actually lost population from 2010-2020, is once again losing a House seat. Two-thirds of Illinois’s population lives in either Chicago’s Cook County or one of its five surrounding “collar counties” (DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will). Democrats hold all 13 districts that cover these six counties with the exception of Rep. Adam Kinzinger’s (R) IL-16, which takes in a bit of the Chicago collar. Meanwhile, Republicans hold four of the five outstate districts, with IL-17 as the only exception. So Democrats have several obvious goals in gerrymandering: — Make sure that the eliminated district is one of the five current Republican seats. — Protect Underwood in her exurban Chicago seat and, less pressingly, Casten, without endangering any of the other Democratic Chicagoland seats. — Reconfigure the downstate districts to go after Davis in IL-13. This likely will be done in part by removing East St. Louis, a Democratic downstate bastion, from IL-12 and putting it in IL-13. This was once a Democratic vote center in IL-12, which Democrats held at the start of the decade, but now that Rep. Mike Bost (R, IL-12) has grabbed a strong hold on the district, there’s no sense, from a Democratic perspective, of “wasting” those Democratic votes in his district. — Keep IL-17 blue. Accomplishing all of these goals would result in a 14-3 Democratic map, an improvement on the current 13-5 advantage. Twitter mapmaker @UMichVoter showed how this could be done recently: IL-13 becomes a Biden +12 district by extending down to East St. Louis and continuing in a thin strip that takes in Springfield and Champaign. Chicagoland is reconfigured in such a way to put Underwood in a double-digit Biden seat, and IL-17 is changed into a Biden +9 seat. Democrats would be favored in those kinds of seats, although they could lose them under the right circumstances. Assuming the map worked as Democrats would want, they would confine Republicans to just three districts and quite possibly push out Kinzinger, a Trump critic who likely would have a hard time in a primary. Another Twitter mapmaker, Ryan Brune, suggests a more modest, 13-4 Democratic gerrymander. The bottom line in Illinois is that Democrats are likely to come out of the state with at least a slightly bigger edge in the state than they hold now — indeed, they almost certainly have to if they are to retain the House, given their redistricting problems elsewhere. One side note: Illinois Republicans may have been hoping to use the state courts to combat Democratic gerrymandering much as Democrats have used Democratic state courts in states such as North Carolina and Pennsylvania to combat Republican gerrymandering in those states. And they appeared to have an opening: One of the Democratic justices lost a retention election last November, setting up an open-seat election in 2022. The court is 4-3 Democratic, so winning that seat without any other changes would flip the court to Republicans. In response, Democrats re-drew the judicial districts, ostensibly to update the maps to better account for current population — they had been last drawn in 1964, although judicial districts are not subjected to the same equal population requirements as legislative districts — but also to improve their chances of maintaining control of the court. INDIANANumber of seats: 9 (no change from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 7-2 R Current party breakdown: 7-2 R Most overpopulated district: IN-5 (Northern Indianapolis suburbs/exurbs) Most underpopulated district: IN-8 (Southwest Indiana) Who controls redistricting: Republicans 2012 control: Republicans Despite being for decades the most clearly Republican state among the seven discussed here, Indiana once had a reputation for competitive House races. Democrats overcame a Republican gerrymander in the 1980s and ended up holding eight of the state’s 10 seats by the end of that decade. More recently, in the 2000s, Indiana featured perhaps the decade’s most intense congressional rivalry, as Mike Sodrel (R) and Baron Hill (D) battled for four straight elections over southern Indiana’s 9th District: the incumbent Hill fought off Sodrel in 2002 but then lost to him in 2004. Hill came back and beat Sodrel in 2006 and then beat him again in 2008. But in 2010, Hill lost to Todd Young (R), who is now in the U.S. Senate. And Indiana’s famously competitive House elections became much less so. Part of that was because of Republican-controlled redistricting, but also because of political trends in the state, as traditional Democratic strength withered outside of the Indianapolis metro area. In 2012, Democrats only narrowly lost northern Indiana’s IN-2, which Joe Donnelly (D) left behind to successfully run for Senate after Republicans redrew the district, but Rep. Jackie Walorski (R, IN-2) has easily held the district since. Democrats also competed for IN-5, a highly-educated suburban/exurban district that runs north of Indianapolis, in 2020, but now-Rep. Victoria Spartz (R) held it in an open-seat race. That about sums up all of the major House-level competition in Indiana over the past decade, where Republicans have won a 7-2 edge in each election. In redistricting, Republicans have a liability to address, and an opportunity to consider. The liability is the aforementioned IN-5, where Mitt Romney’s 17-point edge in 2012 contracted to just a two-point margin for Donald Trump last year. Shoring up the fast-growing district likely will be a priority. The opportunity is in northwest Indiana, where Democratic performance has softened in IN-1, held by first-term Rep. Frank Mrvan (D). Obama’s 2012 margin of 24 points fell to just nine for Biden in 2020. If Republicans got aggressive, they could try to slice up the district, although they may also just keep it intact with the hope that trends in the Gary/Hammond-based Chicago-area district continue to push it toward Republicans over the course of the decade — given its heavily blue collar character, this is a real possibility. So even without aggressive redistricting, Republicans could win an 8-1 edge in the state sometime this decade, although they have to be careful to stay ahead of Democratic trends in Greater Indianapolis. MICHIGANNumber of seats: 13 (-1 from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 9-5 R Current party breakdown: 7-7 Split Most overpopulated district: MI-11 (Detroit suburbs/exurbs) Most underpopulated district: MI-5 (Bay City/Flint/Saginaw) Who controls redistricting: Commission 2012 control: Republicans In both the 2000 and 2010 round of redistricting, Michigan Republicans, who controlled the process, drew maps that Democrats decried as partisan gerrymanders. Though the current map worked as intended for Republicans during much of the past decade, Democrats gained two suburban seats in 2018 to produce a tied 7-7 delegation, and they held them last year. Aside from altering the composition of the congressional delegation in 2018, Michigan voters made another critical change: in a 61%-39% vote, they approved a referendum that established an independent commission for redistricting. The 13-member commission is made up of four Democrats, four Republicans, and five independents — the final maps need seven votes to pass, with two members of each group supporting the plan. Commissioners began the drafting process last week, and have been instructed to keep criteria such as compactness and minority representation in mind. Because of the nature of the commission, it’s hard to tell what the final map may end up looking like, though we can make a few inferences. Earlier this month, commissioners put out a plan that divided the state into 10 regions (Map 1). Map 1: Michigan commission-defined regionsElsewhere in the state, Kalamazoo County could continue to anchor a Republican-leaning district in the commission’s southwest region, as the counties that make up the region account for almost exactly a congressional district’s worth of population. MI-1, which includes the Upper Peninsula, will likely expand but remain heavily GOP — there are some pro-Democratic trends in the Grand Traverse region, but the seat is otherwise safe. Similarly, a Republican-leaning seat in the central part of the state seems likely (on the current map, MI-4 would be the closest thing to this). Democrats have made major inroads in Grand Rapids area. A generation ago, heavily Dutch western Michigan was the most GOP area of the state. If the commission prioritizes compactness or preserving communities of interest, it seems likely that Kent County (which houses Grand Rapids and is the most populous county in the current MI-3), will continue to be the centerpiece of a district. Still, this would not constitute an automatic Democratic flip. Though Biden carried Kent County 52%-46%, presidential trends have not fully trickled down the ballot: Sen. Gary Peters (D-MI) narrowly lost it last year. Moreover, Kent County itself only accounts for 85% of the population of a congressional district: the successor to the current MI-3 will likely retain some of the red turf that surrounds the county. Still, if the commission aimed to create a map that prioritized partisan fairness, a district that links Grand Rapids with Kalamazoo would be possible. Rep. Peter Meijer (R, MI-3), a Trump critic, holds the district now, and while he could be vulnerable in a primary, he could very well be stronger than the average Republican in a general election. The commission’s “Detroit Metro” region contains enough residents for almost exactly five congressional districts. As it is, districts 13 and 14, which contain parts of Detroit proper, are each 57% Black by composition — they are currently held by Democratic Reps. Rashida Tlaib (D, MI-13) and Brenda Lawrence (D, MI-14). Though Rep. Debbie Dingell’s (D, MI-12) current district is split between Ann Arbor and some working-class communities just south of Detroit, she is from the latter and will probably run in a Wayne County seat. North of Detroit, Reps. Andy Levin (D, MI-9) and Haley Stevens (MI-11) will probably run in districts that include suburban Oakland County. Overall, there is a lot of uncertainty in Michigan. It will have 13 seats at the start of the next Congress, and could realistically elect anything from an 8-5 Republican to an 8-5 Democratic delegation. MINNESOTANumber of seats: 8 (no change from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 5-3 D Current party breakdown: 4-4 split Most overpopulated district: MN-3 (Western Twin Cities suburbs) Most underpopulated district: MN-7 (Western Minnesota) Who controls redistricting: Split 2012 control: Split The potential for drama in Minnesota redistricting was drastically reduced when the census apportionment preserved the state’s 8th U.S. House district. Many projections suggested the state would lose a seat, which would have necessitated a much more dramatic redistricting than is now required. As it was, Minnesota barely hung on by getting the 435th seat awarded in the reapportionment process (Minnesota also won the 435th seat a decade ago). The Land of 10,000 Lakes illustrates as well as any other state the trends in House districts over the past decade. In the first election of the past decade, 2012, Democrats won a 5-3 edge in the state’s delegation by retaking MN-8, a geographically large district that covers the state’s Iron Range in the northeastern tip of the state. Rep. Jim Oberstar (D) first won the district in 1974, and he easily won reelection until losing in 2010 — a preview of the rightward turn the white working-class district would take in the years to come. In 2008, MN-8 voted for Barack Obama by eight points, basically the same as John Kerry’s victory there in 2004 — this despite Obama running about 10 points ahead of Kerry’s national margin in 2008. There are a lot of examples of places where Obama ran behind Kerry or did no better than Kerry that would later shift strongly to Donald Trump in 2016 and 2020. Democrats did rebound and win MN-8 in 2012, 2014, and 2016, but Republicans won it as an open seat in 2018 and easily held it last year. Democrats also lost two other geographically large districts where Trump performed markedly better than Mitt Romney had in 2012, MN-1 in southern Minnesota and MN-7 in western Minnesota, in 2018 and 2020, respectively. Former Rep. Collin Peterson (D, MN-7) finally was washed away by the Republican tide in his district in 2020, as he lost by a double-digit margin while Trump was once again carrying his district by roughly 30 points. Peterson was a major outlier in the House prior to his loss: No other member held any district that the other party had won by even 20 points for president, let alone 30. Meanwhile, in 2018, Democrats captured two Republican-held districts in the orbit of Minnesota’s Twin Cities: MN-3 in the western Minneapolis suburbs and MN-2, which extends south and east from St. Paul. These results had the effect of sorting out Minnesota’s House districts along presidential lines. In 2016, Republicans held MN-3 despite it voting for Hillary Clinton, and they also held MN-2 as it narrowly backed Trump (the district would swing to Biden in 2020). Meanwhile, Democrats held MN-1, MN-7, and MN-8 even as Trump carried all three by double digits. By 2020, Republicans had captured all three districts. So after featuring four “crossover” House districts as recently as 2016, Minnesota now has none: Democrats hold the four Biden districts, and Republicans hold the four Trump districts. This transition is shown in Map 2. Map 2: Minnesota House/presidential voting, 2016 vs. 2020Barring major changes, the district to watch in Minnesota is MN-2, held by Rep. Angie Craig (D). It featured the closest race in the state in 2020, as Craig won by two points over veteran Tyler Kistner (R), who is running again in 2022. Biden won the district by seven points, but Craig ran behind Biden and also lost some votes to a deceased pro-marijuana candidate, the death of whom almost delayed the election for the seat. A few months ago, we sketched out a scenario in which Craig could get a better district while Rep. Jim Hagedorn (R, MN-1) could also be made safer (he only won by three points last year, running several points behind Trump in terms of margin). But we suspect Republicans might not want to make consequential trades between MN-1 and MN-2, as Hagedorn is likely less vulnerable in the context of 2022 than Craig is. See that article for more on the dynamics. OHIONumber of seats: 15 (-1 from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 12-4 R Current party breakdown: 12-4 R Most overpopulated district: OH-3 (Columbus) Most underpopulated district: OH-6 (Eastern border along Ohio River) Who controls redistricting: Republicans 2012 control: Republicans It’s difficult to find a big-state gerrymander that was as effective as Ohio’s Republican-drawn map was in the 2010s. It’s also difficult to find a big state with as many variables in its redistricting process for the 2020s. Let’s review the history first, and then explore the new system. In 2008, Democrats won a narrow, 10-8 advantage in the state’s U.S. House delegation, breaking through on a Republican-drawn map. It’s the only time Democrats have won a majority of the state’s delegation since the Republican Revolution of 1994, when Republicans won the House for the first time in four decades. Another Republican wave, in 2010, restored the Republican gerrymander and then some: The GOP won 13 of 18 seats, a seat better than their high-water mark from earlier in the decade. Controlling the process in advance of the 2012 election, Republicans had to deal with the slow-growing state’s loss of two congressional district. They axed one district from each party, with the goal of electing 12 Republicans and four Democrats. It worked — no seats changed hands throughout the decade — although that glosses over some of the change in the 16 districts over the course of the 2010s. Few states performed better for Donald Trump in 2016 and 2020 compared to previous Republican presidential nominees than Ohio. Trump carried the state by eight points in each of his elections, pushing the one-time bellwether state further to the right compared to the nation as a whole than it had been since before the New Deal. The pro-Republican shift was perhaps most notable in Eastern Ohio. OH-13, a district drawn by Republicans as a Democratic vote sink under the 2010s map and held by Rep. Tim Ryan (D), gave Barack Obama a nearly 30-point margin in 2012. Last year, OH-13 supported Joe Biden, but by just over three points — this placed the district slightly right of the national popular vote (Biden won that by about 4.5%). Map 3 compares the elections in the district. Map 3: OH-13, 2012 vs. 2020OH-13 is a prime candidate to be eliminated in redistricting, as Ryan is running for Senate: It is a Democratic vote sink that isn’t even that Democratic anymore. It would be easy for it to be absorbed by other districts. In the past, Republicans would not have wanted the one-time Democratic post-industrial powerhouse counties of Mahoning (Youngstown) and Trumbull (Warren) put together in a Republican district. But both of those counties voted for Trump in 2020, so surrounding Republicans can easily take them on. Of the state’s other districts, only one — Rep. Troy Balderson’s (R) OH-12 in the northern Columbus suburbs/exurbs — exhibited a notable pro-Democratic shift from 2012, going from Romney by 10.5 to Trump by 5.9. Democrats came within a point of capturing the seat in an August 2018 special election, the only time they got very close to winning one of the state’s 12 Republican-held districts. Rep. Steve Chabot (R, OH-1) in the Cincinnati area also faced competitive races in 2018 and 2020 as Republican performance fell off a bit over the course of the decade. So this is the landscape in Ohio — a state that has clearly shifted right in recent years. Republicans dominate the state legislature and control the governorship, so if they had complete gerrymandering power, they would almost certainly be able to improve upon their edge in the delegation as Ohio loses another seat in this cycle’s reapportionment. But the state’s new redistricting process could constrain that power. In 2018, Ohio voters overwhelmingly approved a constitutional amendment creating a system that is not equivalent to the independent redistricting commissions that exist in several other states, but that also could hypothetically constrain egregious gerrymanders. The state’s 65 smallest counties cannot be split, the next 18 largest can only be split once, and the five largest can only be split twice (Democratic vote center Cuyahoga, home to Cleveland, is covered by four different congressional districts currently). Additionally, of the state’s major municipalities, only Columbus (which is too populous to fit in a single district and spills into multiple counties) can be split; the state’s other biggest cities must remain whole, including Cleveland and Cincinnati. This should have the effect of creating more regular district lines in Ohio. The state legislature gets the first crack at drawing the lines, but a three-fifths majority must approve them and, crucially, that majority must include at least half the members of both parties. If this fails, a seven-member commission draws the lines, but that only succeeds if two of the minority party members vote in favor of the map. That commission, as currently composed, has a 5-2 Republican edge, but remember that the two Democrats would need to vote in favor of the map. Only if these two processes fail can the legislature pass a map with a simple majority, but that map would only be in place for four years instead of the customary 10. One other wrinkle here is the Ohio Supreme Court, which has a 4-3 Republican majority (justices are nominated in partisan primaries but do not have a party label on the general election ballot, which likely has been a boon to Democrats as they’ve flipped three seats in the last two cycles). It is possible that the high court could throw out a Republican-drawn map if the court found that the map did not comply with the new system/guidelines, although that would take at least one Republican voting with the Democrats. Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor (R) was in the minority in a case from 2012 that unsuccessfully challenged the GOP-drawn state legislative maps last time, for what it’s worth (possibly nothing, but possibly not). It isn’t hard to find Republican-friendly Ohio gerrymanders from Twitter mapmakers that abide by the new rules but still produce a map that would likely result in a 13-2 Republican majority, with Democratic seats only in Cleveland and Columbus. At the same time, it’s also possible to draw a much worse map for Republicans, which likely would give them a clear majority of the seats but would allow Democrats to potentially win more seats than they hold now. One possible “compromise” would be to draw a third safe Democratic seat in Cincinnati, which perhaps would attract support from Black Democrats in the state legislature, as a Black Democrat would have a solid chance to win such a district. Or, heaven forbid, perhaps there will actually be a competitive seat or two in the state from the get-go. For instance, Summit (Akron) and Stark (Canton) counties together have a bit more than 900,000 people, or a little more than 100,000 over the optimal size for a district. The two counties collectively voted for Donald Trump by less than two points, so it’s easy to see a swing district covering much of that territory, as well as competitive seats in other parts of the state. Then perhaps Ohio could actually see changes to its House delegation based on campaign performance and the national environment — a foreign concept in the state in the 2010s. Regardless, Ohio is a major wild card in the national redistricting picture, with a number of possibilities ranging from a maximalist 13-2 Republican gerrymander to Democrats improving on their current 12-4 deficit. PENNSYLVANIANumber of seats: 17 (-1 from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 13-5 R Current party breakdown: 9-9 Split Most overpopulated district: PA-10 (Harrisburg/York/Carlisle) Most underpopulated district: PA-15 (Northwest-Central PA) Who controls redistricting: Split 2012 control: Republicans In some ways, Pennsylvania has mirrored Michigan over the last several redistricting cycles: during the 2000 and 2010 rounds, Democrats complained as Republicans drew partisan maps — but now, as neither party has a monopoly on the remapping process, each state has a tied delegation. To get to that tied delegation, though, Democrats were helped by a 2018 state Supreme Court ruling: after Democrats won a majority of the body’s seats, in 2015, they threw out the GOP-drawn congressional map and enacted a new plan. Between the 2016 and 2018 cycles, Democrats added four members. If Gov. Tom Wolf (D-PA) and the GOP-controlled legislature cannot agree on a plan — something that seems likely — the state Supreme Court may get another chance to draw a map. Still, the court won’t be able to take an entirely minimal change approach this time, as the state is losing a seat. Though Democrats would face a sympathetic court, population trends simply may not be in their favor: on a map with one fewer seat, some vulnerable Democrats may see their seats pick up more Republicans. In northeastern Pennsylvania, Rep. Matt Cartwright (D, PA-8) already holds a Trump seat. Aside from some blue turf currently in Democratic Rep. Susan Wild’s next-door PA-7, there is not much friendly territory for Cartwright to add. Wild, in turn, probably can’t afford to lose very many Democrats: her PA-7 overlaps with most of the Lehigh Valley, an area that usually mirrors the statewide vote — in other words, it’s swingy. Moving into the Philadelphia area, the Bucks County-based PA-1 is a swing seat on paper but Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R) has garnered serious crossover support since he was first elected, in 2016. Fitzpatrick is from a political family in the area, and assuming he is renominated (he won his past two primaries with “only” about two-thirds of the vote), he’d start out favored in any Bucks-centric seat. Philadelphia proper contains enough population for just over two congressional districts. Rep. Brendan Boyle (D, PA-2) hails from the working-class northeastern part of the city, while Rep. Dwight Evans (D, PA-3) represents a Black-majority district there — under a similar map, each would be fine. In Philadelphia’s suburban collar counties, three Democratic women were initially elected in 2018, and all could end up with similar seats. Just to the city’s southwest, Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon (D, PA-5) represents all of Delaware County. Assuming Delaware County is kept whole (it makes up most of a district), she’ll have somewhere to run. Similarly, Rep. Madeleine Dean’s (D, PA-4) district is essentially coterminous with suburban Montgomery County — as long as the county is not splintered multiple ways, she’ll likely have a safe blue seat. Finally, Rep. Chrissy Houlahan (D, PA-6) has a district that includes all of blue-trending Chester County. Houlahan’s PA-6 also reaches up into Berks County, to grab the city of Reading — PA-6 could simply take in more of Berks County. In 2020, Houlahan had the closest race of the three, but she still won by a clear 56%-44% margin. In the Trump era, Bucks County, which has more of a working class contingent, has replaced the more upscale Chester County as the least Democratic county in the collar — this swap has probably benefited both Fitzpatrick and Houlahan. Moving into south-central Pennsylvania, if the court keeps a similar configuration, PA-10 may still be competitive. The current PA-10 includes the state capital, Harrisburg, as well as its suburbs, in Cumberland County, and reaches down to the city of York. Rep. Scott Perry (R, PA-10) is one of the delegation’s most conservative members: initially elected to a safer seat in 2012, he held on by a 51%-49% margin when the new seat was drawn and by a more comfortable 53%-47% last year — his 2020 opponent, former state Auditor Eugene DePasquale (D), is seriously considering a rematch. Next door, in PA-11, Republican Rep. Lloyd Smucker seems likely to run in whichever seat Lancaster County ends up in — one of the most historically GOP counties in the state, it makes up the majority of a district. In southwestern PA, Pittsburgh proper is in Democratic Rep. Mike Doyle’s PA-18 (though the “PA-18” designation will be eliminated for the next Congress), a district that is contained entirely within Allegheny County. Next door, Rep. Conor Lamb (D, PA-17) is running for Senate and is leaving open a Trump-to-Biden seat that could become redder. Biden and Lamb each took 51% in PA-17 last year: the bulk of it comes from Pittsburgh’s northern suburbs (which have trended blue, but were Republican until recently), while it also includes reddening Beaver County and a small part of Butler County. Democrats would favor a map that unpacks Doyle’s district (Biden carried it by 30 points) by moving it into Westmoreland County, thereby freeing up closer-in Pittsburgh suburbs for PA-17 (ironically, the GOP gerrymander that was scrapped for 2018 had Doyle representing a tiny part of Westmoreland County). Republicans would rather see the Pittsburgh seat stay entirely within Allegheny County — that way, PA-17 would have to expand its holdings in the adjacent, and redder, counties. Aside from Perry, none of Pennsylvania’s Republicans had especially close races last year. Though one of the GOP-held seats may end up getting eliminated — geographically, they hold several districts in the depopulating middle of the state — Republicans may have some promising opportunities to flip new seats next year. WISCONSINNumber of seats: 8 (no change from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 5-3 R Current party breakdown: 5-3 R Most overpopulated district: WI-2 (Madison) Most underpopulated district: WI-4 (Milwaukee) Who controls redistricting: Split 2012 control: Republicans In 2011, Republicans in Wisconsin came up with what would become one of the decade’s most effective plans. In 2010, the Badger State congressional delegation flipped from 5-3 Democratic to 5-3 Republican — five cycles later, the balance has not changed. Ten years ago, a key objective of Republican map drawers was to turn veteran Rep. Ron Kind’s (D, WI-3) western seat into a Democratic sink while protecting then-first-term Rep. Sean Duffy (R, WI-7), who had just flipped a rural seat to the north. Portage County, which contains the college town of Stevens Point, was shifted from WI-7 to WI-3, while WI-7 picked up some redder areas of WI-3. As it turned out, Duffy didn’t need help: the 7th District has stayed comfortably in GOP hands since 2010, and even the older, more Democratic version would have stayed red. Kind’s district, though it was made bluer, still trended red anyway: it voted for Obama and Trump twice, while former Gov. Scott Walker (R-WI) carried it in his three successful gubernatorial runs, but not in his 2018 loss. In 2020, as Trump slightly improved his showing in WI-3, Kind was held to just a three-point margin — this was the closest race of his career (though he may have still won, he caught a lucky break in 2016, as Republicans did not field a challenger against him). Given these larger-scale shifts, it was not too surprising when Kind announced his retirement earlier this month. With the redistricting process split between a Democratic governor and a Republican legislature, the configuration of WI-3, which is the only truly marginal seat on the map, will almost certainly be a point of contention. Republicans can take some comfort that the state Supreme Court, which could end up drawing the map if the process deadlocks, is controlled 4-3 by GOP-aligned judges, although Justice Brian Hagedorn has shown something of an independent streak. Currently, about 40% of WI-3’s votes come from three “urban” counties: Eau Claire, La Crosse, and Portage. That trio gave Biden a 54%-44% margin last year, while the rest of the district gave Trump a 57%-41% vote — for perspective, in 2012, Obama carried its urban counties 57%-42% and the rest by 53%-45%. In an ideal arrangement for Democrats, WI-3 would take in some bluer turf in the orbit of Madison’s Dane County, such as Iowa County. Depending on what is added and/or subtracted, WI-3 could become a narrow Biden seat. Dane County makes up most of WI-2, and any version of the district containing it would be deep blue. Republicans would probably rather give the 3rd District more of northern Wisconsin, as WI-7 (now the reddest district in the state based on the 2020 presidential results) has GOP votes to spare. In the Milwaukee area, WI-4 will have to pick up about 40,000 residents. It already contains all of Milwaukee proper, so it will probably have to pick up one of the whiter suburbs around it (WI-4 is majority-nonwhite by composition). WI-1 and WI-5 both take up substantial chunks of Milwaukee County, but they will not be hard to shore up, as heavily GOP Waukesha County is split between the two districts. Before 2002, WI-1 did not have much of Waukesha County, but, as a pro-incumbent plan was passed that cycle, more of it was added to strengthen then-Rep. Paul Ryan (R, WI-1), who would later be the vice presidential nominee on the 2012 GOP presidential ticket as well as Speaker of the House. The 2000 version of WI-1 actually favored Al Gore in the presidential race that year (though Ryan routinely overperformed). If WI-1 is taken out of Waukesha County, it may be competitive, but this doesn’t strike us as especially likely. Going a bit north, WI-6 and WI-8 probably won’t see large partisan changes. WI-6 is based in east-central Wisconsin and, aside from a sliver of Milwaukee County that it contains, Trump carried every county in the district. WI-8 has long been a Green Bay-area seat, and Rep. Mike Gallagher (R, WI-8) has performed well in his three successful elections, though he has been mentioned as a potential Senate candidate if Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) retires. Given the tense partisan atmosphere in Wisconsin, it seems more likely than not that the courts will have to get involved. If a status quo plan is adopted, Democrats would essentially be guaranteed to only hold districts 2 and 4, while WI-3, without Kind, would probably be a Toss-up, at best. So Republicans could end up getting to a 6-2 delegation in what is otherwise a very evenly divided state. ConclusionSpeaking of the Midwest more broadly in his book on American political geography and electoral rules, Red Fighting Blue, the shrewd political scientist David A. Hopkins wrote that the Midwest was “the nation’s most politically representative — and competitive — region,” and that it continues to hold “an unmatched pivotal position” in American politics. That is true in presidential politics, and the region is just as vital in House elections. Process changes and election results have muddied the gerrymandering power in the region. Judicial interventions could serve to effectively preserve the status quo in some of these states, while there are some major unknowns, such as how Michigan’s new commission operates and whether Republican gerrymandering power is constrained in Ohio. Beyond that, there should still be a number of swing seats spread across these seven states, and Democrats cannot afford to lose the ones they currently control with such a slim majority in the House. They may be able to shore up some of those districts, particularly in Illinois, but they likely will still have several vulnerable seats dotted across the Great Lakes region next year. Read the fine printLearn more about the Crystal Ball and find out how to contact us here. Sign up to receive Crystal Ball e-mails like this one delivered straight to your inbox. Use caution with Sabato’s Crystal Ball, and remember: “He who lives by the Crystal Ball ends up eating ground glass!” |
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38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
White House Cuts Audio as Joe Biden Jokes About Stranded Americans
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
August 26, 2021 THE LATEST Why Biden was forced to bring back one of Trump’s most racist policies
by Hayes Brown One of the cruelest policies under former President Donald Trump was the ‘Remain in Mexico’ program, which forced asylum seekers to wait on the southern side of the border for months — if not years — before getting a chance to come to the U.S. The Biden administration ended the policy in June, but a string of Trump-appointed federal judges have ruled that it needs to be rebooted. This is the racist, anti-immigrant legacy that Trump has left the country, Hayes Brown writes.
The “return of the Remain in Mexico policy shows the lasting impact of Trump’s reshaping of the federal bench,” Brown writes. The rulings from the federal courts “should cause us to question whether a major chunk the judicial branch is truly neutral in immigration cases.”
Read Hayes Brown’s full analysis and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Thursday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES The FDA’s green light for Pfizer means it’s go time. Read More It’s easier to complain about price tags than say ‘poor people don’t deserve help.’ Read More For DeSantis, whose political ambitions are hardly a secret, the circumstances are hardly ideal. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez joins Joy Reid for a live interview. Watch The ReidOut, tonight at 7 p.m. ET. On Wednesday, Sept. 8, 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 Sept. 11 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 on 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 THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Today we report setbacks effecting efforts to evacuate U.S. and Afghan citizens from Kabul, why Congressional leaders are calling on President Joe Biden to call a drought disaster in Western states, and why Einstein was right about the way light bends through space.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Thursday morning. The United States and its allies warned people looking to flee Afghanistan against travelling to Kabul airport on Thursday amid fears of a terror attack.
The warning was the latest setback for evacuation efforts ahead of President Joe Biden’s fast-approaching deadline, as thousands continued to crowd the airport in an effort to leave the country in the wake of the Taliban’s takeover.
Other western nations also raised the alarm and some said they were bringing their evacuations to an end.
The U.S. Embassy in Kabul on Wednesday urged Americans not to travel to the airport without individual instructions from a U.S. government representative, citing security threats outside.
“The security situation in Afghanistan remains volatile,” the British foreign office said in updated travel advice late Wednesday, telling people to avoid the airport and “move away to a safe location.”
“There is an ongoing and high threat of terrorist attack,” it said.
Also on Afghanistan this morning:
Thursday’s Top Stories
Congressional leaders are calling on President Joe Biden to declare a drought disaster in the West as record temperatures and historic wildfires batter multiple states. At hospitals across the South, doctors report treating more pregnant women than at any point in the pandemic. Gulia Dale was fatally shot outside his New Jersey home on July Fourth after his wife called 911 to report that her husband had left home with a gun. OPINION Hochul’s swearing in on Tuesday marks a milestone for New York. But the future is far from certain for Albany’s new boss, writes Susan Del Percio, a Republican strategist. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
OPINION The tragedy’s primary cause was the decision to withdraw, not the way the withdrawal was conducted, writes political analyst Bradley Bowman. Shopping
Portable AC units are easier to install than traditional window AC units. Though they’re typically a pricier alternative, we found some affordable options. One Fun Thing
A new photograph from the Hubble Space Telescope shows a stunning “Einstein Ring” billions of light-years from Earth — a phenomenon named after Albert Einstein, who predicted that gravity could bend light.
The round object at the center of the photograph released by the European Space Agency is actually three galaxies that appear as seven, with four separate images of the most distant galaxies forming a visible ring around the others.
At such a great distance, the farthest galaxy should be invisible to even the best space telescopes, but its light is curved by the two galaxies in front, about 3 billion light-years away, so its image appears to us in five separate places: four times in the ring and once at the center of the ring.
Read more 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 |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Poll shows wide differences in opinion by news consumption
Our latest NBC News poll continues to show an enormous divide in opinion by how Americans get their news – either conservative media, liberal media, social media and those who still get their news from broadcast TV and newspapers.
Check out these numbers:
Biden job approval
All adults: 49%
Among those who get their news from conservative media: 24%
Among those who get news from liberal media: 69%
Among those who get news from newspapers/broadcast TV (not cable or social media): 60%
Among those who get news from social media: 47%
Approval of Biden’s Covid handling:
All: 53%
Conservative media: 30%
Liberal media: 73%
Newspapers/broadcast: 63%
Social media: 50%
Approval of Biden’s economic handling
All: 47%
Conservative media: 24%
Liberal media: 65%
Newspapers/broadcast: 52%
Social media: 46%
Approval of Biden’s Afghanistan handling
All: 25%
Conservative media: 12%
Liberal media: 37%
Newspapers/broadcast: 29%
Social media: 20%
Fauci favorable rating
All: 40%
Conservative media: 17%
Liberal media: 57%
Newspapers/broadcast: 56%
Social media: 33%
Congressional preference
All: D+1
Conservative media: R+56
Liberal media: D+45
Newspapers/broadcast: D+19
Social media: D+2
Already received Covid vaccine
All: 69%
Conservative media: 60%
Liberal media: 79%
Newspapers/broadcast: 78%
Social media: 65%
Worst still to come with Covid
All: 42%
Conservative media: 34%
Liberal media: 56%
Newspapers/broadcast: 44%
Social media: 41%
Jan 6 was act of terrorism
All: 52%
Conservative media: 29%
Liberal media: 69%
Newspapers/broadcast: 58%
Social media: 52%
Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images
It’s a chicken-or-egg question: What came first – the media Americans are getting that are informing their views?
Or did they already have these views first – and they decided to get their news from them as a result?
Or it is a combination of the two?
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Profound – and fatal – consequences
Regardless of what came first, this news silo-ing also has profound – even fatal – consequences during a pandemic.
Look at these additional numbers, per the MTP Daily team. (Note: the Covid numbers come from the NYT county data, as of Wednesday night.)
HIGHEST INFECTION RATES
County Cases Per 100k 2020 margin
Cook, GA 303 Trump +40
Pierce, GA 238 Trump +75
Crockett, TN 233 Trump +54
Wayne, MS 225 Trump +27
Hancock, MS 220 Trump +56
Clarke, MS 218 Trump +30
Dimmit, TX 217 Biden +24
Berrien, GA 211 Trump +67
Tift, GA 210 Trump +34
Brantley, GA 209 Trump +81
Emanuel, GA 202 Trump +39
Clay, KY 202 Trump +77
Prentiss, MS 200 Trump +58
George, MS 193 Trump +77
Magoffin, KY 191 Trump +54
McIntosh, GA 190 Trump +21
Lanier, GA 189 Trump +42
Jones, MS 188 Trump +42
Columbia, FL 187 Trump +45
Glynn, GA 186 Trump + 23
Dodge, GA 186 Trump +46
Pearl River, MS 185 Trump +64
Perry, MS 185 Trump +53
Del Norte, CA 185 Trump +16
Marion, TN 185 Trump +51
Lauderdale, TN 182 Trump +28
Ben Hill, GA 175 Trump +26
Hardee, FL 172 Trump +45
Jackson, KY 171 Trump +79
Knox, IN 171 Trump +47
FASTEST GROWING INFECTION RATES
County 14-Day Increase 2020 Margin
Mackinac, MI +2,643%. Trump +24
Meade, SD +1,540%. Trump +48
Lawrence, SD +1,520%. Trump +31
Butte, SD +1,050% Trump +58
Mineral, WV +718% Trump +57
Emery, UT +717% Trump +74
Washington, ID +700% Trump +58
Poweshiek ,IA +700% Trump +13
Taylor, WI +650% Trump +47
Page, IA +571% Trump +43
When you put together these two different sets of numbers – the political differences by media, the Covid infection rates – it tells quite the story.
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
26,203: The number of new coronavirus cases Florida reported Wednesday, yet again breaking its single-day case record (which was most recently set on Aug. 12).
38,393,932: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 167,681 since yesterday morning.)
636,221: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,524 since yesterday morning).
364,842,701: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 926,909 since yesterday morning.)
51.7 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
62.7 percent: The share of all American adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
13,400: The approximate number of people evacuated from Afghanistan on Wednesday, per the Biden administration.
12,000: The number of additional Covid deaths under the Cuomo administration that new Gov. Kathy Hochul acknowledged yesterday.
6: The number of years in prison a man involved in the kidnapping plot against Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer was sentenced to on Wednesday.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: Lester’s exclusive interview
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McAuliffe leads in new poll
A new Wason Center poll shows Democrat Terry McAuliffe leading Republican Glenn Youngkin by 9 points among likely voters in Virginia’s upcoming gubernatorial contest, 50 percent to 41 percent.
That margin is higher than other polls of this race have found, which typically have had McAuliffe ahead by 2-4 points.
The Democratic candidates for lieutenant governor and attorney general are leading their GOP opponents by, respectively, 10 and 12 points.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The United States and its allies warned people to avoid travelling to Kabul airport on Thursday as fears of a potential terror attack threatened evacuation efforts.
Vermont Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders is defending the $3.5 trillion reconciliation plan, telling Politico that top line is already the product of a negotiation and “the truth is we need more.”
Covid-related hospitalizations eclipsed 100,000, a mark that hasn’t been surpassed since vaccines became widely available.
The Jan. 6 committee in the House issued broad records requests for communications between the Trump White House and federal agencies ahead of the attack on the Capitol.
The man convicted in the assassination of Robert Kennedy Jr. is seeking parole, and the Washington Post reports prosecutors won’t challenge him.
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
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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 Thursday, Aug. 26, and we’re covering the Afghanistan evacuation, another in a series of mysterious attacks on diplomatic staff, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWAmericans in AfghanistanAn estimated 1,500 Americans remain in Afghanistan and are awaiting evacuation by US forces, according to the State Department yesterday. The statement clarifies the government’s estimates on how many US citizens and their families need to depart the country—a number that has been unclear since the Taliban seized control of Afghanistan roughly 10 days ago. Secretary of State Antony Blinken also said there were roughly 6,000 Americans remaining as of Aug. 14, of which 4,500 had been evacuated. About one-third of those remaining had been contacted with departure instructions, while officials were attempting to contact at least 1,000 others—some of whom may have left the country already. Reports yesterday (paywall, WSJ) also suggest American forces and intelligence agencies are conducting missions outside of the Kabul airport in an attempt to rescue stranded Americans. The Biden administration has said it will stick to its Aug. 31 deadline to withdraw from the country. Havana Syndrome US officials are probing possible instances of Havana syndrome experienced by officials and staff accompanying Vice President Kamala Harris on her trip to Southeast Asia. It was unclear whether the vice president herself had been affected, though her trip was delayed pending the investigation. The condition refers to a set of mysterious symptoms that have afflicted US diplomatic staff since at least 2016, which include dizziness, headaches, and in some cases, lingering neurological issues. The condition was first reported in Cuba, but has since been observed in staff stationed in China and Germany. While some have argued the effects are an instance of mass hysteria, a December study suggested pulsed microwave energy—which can somewhat penetrate walls and has been shown to induce neurological symptoms, particularly affecting the inner ear—may have been the culprit. See an overview of the December report here. Who is behind the attacks remains a mystery. Military Mandate Kicks InThe Pentagon said yesterday it will require all active troops to be vaccinated against COVID-19 as soon as possible. The move comes two days after a vaccine from Pfizer/BioNTech was granted full approval—a step up from its previous emergency use authorization—by US health regulators. The order is expected to affect a few hundred thousand troops, depending on their branch of service; see our previous write-up on the directive here. The announcement comes as the average of COVID-19 cases in the US surpasses 150,000 per day, with daily deaths near 1,100 (see data). There have been inconsistencies between various sources on the number of Americans currently hospitalized, though at least one primary source shows the number beginning to level off around 90,000. In related news, incoming New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) added roughly 12,000 COVID-19 deaths to the state’s tally, implying the Cuomo administration had undercounted the total. In partnership with The Farmer’s DogIF FOOD COULD SPEAKIf you have a dog, you’ve probably heard the rumor that “kibble cleans teeth.” But currently, kibble is the most commonly eaten form of dog food by far, yet over 80% of dogs have dental disease by age 3. If kibble truly is cleaning while it’s being crunched, how could that be the case? There are lots of myths that kibble manufacturers want you to believe about those mysterious brown pellets. Like that they’re healthy, and not hyper-processed. Or made with “real” ingredients—instead of the often diseased ones they really use. Your dog’s food shouldn’t have secrets. That’s why The Farmer’s Dog is making it easy to feed your dog truly healthy food. It’s real human-grade food, made in human food kitchens, and delivered to your door. As a 1440 reader, try your first box 50% off today. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & CultureBrought to you by The Ascent > Adult film star Ron Jeremy indicted on 34 counts of sexual assault against 21 victims dating back to 1996 (More) > Michael Nader, actor best known for roles on “Dynasty” and “All My Children,” dies at 76 of cancer (More) > ESPN drops reporter Rachel Nichols from all NBA coverage following controversial remarks about former colleague Maria Taylor (More) | Serena Williams becomes latest big name to withdraw from US Open due to injury (More) From our partners: A five-star balance transfer offer gives you 0% interest for 18 months on balance transfers. And this card’s got it. Avoid pesky interest payments and enjoy industry-topping cash back rates, with no annual fee. Science & Technology> Physicists demonstrate the ability to cool a proton, one of the fundamental particles of an atom, using charged particles located several centimeters away; technique is mediated by an electric circuit rather than direct interactions (More) > Scientists show analysis of an individual cell’s mutation profile provides insight into its developmental history (More) > Google sister company Waymo launches autonomous taxi service in San Francisco; program is open to vetted passengers who must sign a non-disclosure agreement (More) Business & Markets> US stock markets continue streak of gains (S&P 500 +0.2%, Dow +0.1%, Nasdaq +0.2%) ahead of today’s Jackson Hole symposium where central bankers are scheduled to provide updates on monetary policy (More) | CEOs of tech giants including Apple, Amazon, and Google, among others, meet with President Joe Biden to discuss cybersecurity initiatives (More) > Delta Air Lines says unvaccinated employees enrolled in the company’s healthcare plan will be subject to a $200 monthly surcharge (More) > OnlyFans reverses decision to ban sexually explicit content on its platform, walking back last week’s announcement; the primarily adult content creator site suggested it had trouble securing financing (More) Politics & World Affairs> California’s Caldor Fire moves toward Lake Tahoe; blaze has consumed more than 126,000 acres at 12% containment (More) | State’s Dixie Fire at 45% containment after burning through 740,000 acres (More) > Estimates say 89% of rental assistance provided via COVID-19 stimulus packages has not been distributed; analysis reveals just $5.2B of $46.5B in funds has been spent (More) > House panel probing the Jan. 6 storming of the US Capitol to seek White House documents from the Trump administration, gives record keepers two weeks to provide files (More) IN-DEPTHSolving the Black Hole ParadoxQuanta | Natalie Wolchover. Physicist Netta Engelhardt thinks she may have solved one of the discipline’s greatest mysteries—what happens to information that falls into a black hole. (Read) Florida’s Python HuntersField & Stream | Allie Conti. Inside the world of the thrill-seeking snake hunters who’ve taken it upon themselves to solve Florida’s invasive python problem. (Read) YOUR DOG’S KIBBLEIn partnership with The Farmer’s Dog Pet food isn’t subject to the same legal safety standards as real food. And unfortunately, some kibble manufacturers take that to the extreme, using diseased ingredients in their mass-produced kibbles. But The Farmer’s Dog thinks that shouldn’t be the case. Dogs thrive on diets of real, fresh, healthy food—so that’s what The Farmer’s Dog makes and delivers to your door. As a 1440 reader, get 50% off your first order now. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAVenomous sea snakes are getting frisky with divers. Olympian Suni Lee gets a standing ovation. Message in a bottle makes it from Canada to Ireland. Taylor Swift upends TikTok. Maine’s giant rubber duck mysteriously disappears. Renters return to a tough New York apartment market. Former NBA pro JR Smith enrolls at North Carolina A&T, joins golf team. This 19-year-old woman is close to becoming the youngest around-the-world pilot. Clickbait: The Nirvana baby sues. Historybook: Mother Teresa born (1910); 19th Amendment, granting US women right to vote, takes effect (1920); First televised Major League Baseball game (1939); HBD NBA star James Harden (1989). “If you can’t feed a hundred people, then feed just one.” – Mother Mary Teresa Bojaxhiu 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. 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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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73.) POPULIST PRESS
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
The Daily Dot turns 10 years old this week. In today’s Internet Insider, IRL Editor Kris Seavers reflects on the significance of gay Babadook memes and revisits praise for Fat Ursula.
BREAK THE INTERNET 10 years of celebrating queer and trans lives online The first article I ever wrote for the Daily Dot explained the gay Babadook meme. The meme’s origin—a screenshot of indie horror film The Babadook that allegedly appeared in the LGBT section on Netflix—is one of the internet’s more straightforward jokes.
But as an intern, it felt simultaneously absurd and fitting that I would get to track down the best memes about the gay Babadook (and dive down the rabbit hole of the Mr. Krabbs “thicc ass bih” meme) for my first assignment.
Like countless others, I have the internet to thank for fostering my understanding of my own queerness: As a teenager lurking on Tumblr and Autostraddle, I learned the coded language of being extremely online that made me feel in on the joke when in real life, I often felt isolated.
That the Daily Dot not only cared about the gay Babadook meme but saw it as a newsworthy cultural relic made me feel seen as a queer journalist whose sensibilities and interests have intertwined with the internet since my preteen Neopets days.
After the gay Babadook, I went on to write about the niche queer vampire webseries Carmilla and the Personals Instagram account that evolved to become the Lex dating app. Meanwhile, I learned from sex writer Ana Valens about the controversial worlds of dragon dildos and otherkin.
As a mirror of the internet, especially its obscure corners, the Daily Dot in all of its 10 years has been a supporter and celebrator of queer and trans identities. It makes me proud to wave my gay Babadook flag high. By Kris Seavers IRL Writer
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THROWBACK TK THROWBACK Remember #HotJafaar? Melissa Blake, well-known disability activist and former Daily Dot contributor, took the hashtag to task after it went viral in response to the live-action remake of Disney’s Aladdin.
In her caustic essay, Blake sets aside hot dude villain talk to discuss the uglification of female villains, especially Ursula, who she laments is “a cautionary tale” of fatness: “Fat is bad. Fat can’t be beautiful. Fat can’t be sexy. Don’t let this happen to you, you poor unfortunate female soul.”
It’s an evergreen reminder that there should room on the internet for everyone—especially fat women and even fictional ones—and a compelling argument that “we can give fat Ursula the same love we’re giving hot Jafar.”
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Thursday 08.26.21 2020 wasn’t just Europe’s hottest year on record. It was the hottest year by quite a bit and one of the three hottest years globally in recorded history, according to a new climate report. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Families walk toward planes for evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport, as seen in this photo from the US Marine Corps. Afghanistan
US diplomats in Kabul warned American citizens early this morning to immediately leave several gates into the airport following what one US official called a “very specific threat stream” from a branch of ISIS. The US believes ISIS-K, a sworn enemy of the Taliban, wants to sow mayhem at the airport and is capable of carrying out attacks. The Taliban’s new rule in Afghanistan has raised fears of a revival of al Qaeda, ISIS and other terrorist entities. In a February deal with the US, the Taliban pledged to prevent al Qaeda and other terror groups from using Afghan soil. Though the Taliban has so far kept such terrorist entities at bay, US officials worry now that the US is on its way out, there is less incentive for such efforts. The dissolution of US intelligence on the ground in Afghanistan makes this possibility even more grave.
Coronavirus
Moderna has completed its submission to the FDA for full approval of its Covid-19 vaccine for people 18 and older. Meanwhile, Pfizer and BioNTech have begun submitting data for full approval of a third “booster” dose of their vaccine. As expected, full FDA approval of the two-dose Pfizer vaccine is leading to more mandates. The Pentagon is requiring all US military service members to get fully vaccinated against Covid-19 immediately. Disney World also reached a deal with two employees unions to require vaccinations among applicable staff. In a worrying turn, some people have been ingesting ivermectin, a drug used to de-worm livestock, as a treatment for Covid-19. Some hospitals and poison control centers have seen an uptick in such cases as some Republican elected officials and conservative media figures irresponsibly tout the drug.
Capitol riot
The House select committee investigating the January 6 Capitol riot has demanded a large collection of documents from several US government agencies. The wide-ranging requests cover communications related to former President Trump’s family members and any communications between Trump or his allies and “any DOJ official” in the days before and after January 6. The committee has also requested information from the National Archives, which houses all of Trump’s records from his time as president. Trump yesterday said he would invoke executive privilege to try to block the investigation but didn’t specify how he would go about that. Ultimately, Trump could try to go to court to stop the committee from obtaining some of these documents.
Extreme weather
Search and rescue efforts have been suspended in Tennessee following a weekend of destructive floods that claimed 20 lives. Now, it’s up to the National Guard and the state Transportation Department to begin massive cleanup efforts. In the West, the region around Lake Tahoe in California and Reno, Nevada, is experiencing the worst air quality in the country by far as several large wildfires burn nearby. The Air Quality Index, an indicator of how unhealthy the air is, spiked to 694 in Tahoe City on Monday; an AQI between 300 and 500 is considered “a health warning of emergency conditions.” As if that weren’t enough, more hurricane activity could happen around the Gulf of Mexico soon. The National Hurricane Center gives the Gulf area an 80% chance of a tropical system developing in the next few days.
Hong Kong
Hong Kong’s national security police are investigating the group behind the city’s annual June 4 vigil, which commemorates pro-democracy protesters who died in the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. As part of the investigation, the group must submit meeting records and personal details of all its directors and members, including addresses and other contact information. Police claimed such information will help them investigate possible crimes against national security. The group, the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China, has reportedly considered disbanding under the city’s controversial new security law as more protesters, journalists and pro-democracy figures have been arrested.
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Fossil confiscated in Brazilian police raid is one of the most complete pterosaur skeletons ever found
New Bob Ross documentary paints a complex portrait of the artist’s life and the battle that followed it
The new ‘Matrix 4’ trailer dropped at CinemaCon
OnlyFans suspends proposed ban on sexually explicit content $5 million That’s how much the FCC has proposed as a fine against right-wing political operatives Jacob Wohl and Jack Burkman for apparently violating US robocalling laws. An investigation found the two men allegedly created hundreds of robocalls designed to discourage voting in the 2020 election. I feel like the world’s biggest porn star.
Spencer Elden, who appeared as a naked baby on the cover of Nirvana’s 1991 album “Nevermind.” Elden made the comment to the Sunday Times in 2007. He is now suing the band, claiming the iconic record cover is an example of child pornography and exploitation. Brought to you by CNN Underscored Nap dresses are all the rage: Here’s what to know and which to buy The brilliance of the nap dress is that they’re generally dressy enough to wear to the office and romantic enough for a weekend date. Here are 15 options we love. Show me the (ripped, waterlogged) money 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 |
- How Many Americans Are Left?
- Elder Abuse at the LA Times
- Biden’s approval rating in free fall
- When you’ve lost the New York Times (3)
- Biden Agonistes
How Many Americans Are Left?
Posted: 25 Aug 2021 04:44 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)The Biden administration is gaslighting the fiasco in Afghanistan in a variety of ways, e.g. by hailing the current chaotic skedaddle as the biggest airlift on record, as though it were a positive achievement. But the administration knows its biggest problem is the likelihood–or inevitability–that it won’t be able to get all U.S. citizens out of Afghanistan. This question has always been clouded by the fact that no one knows how many Americans were in Afghanistan when the exodus began. Administration spokesmen have offered various estimates, including 5,000 to 10,000; 11,000; and 10,000 to 15,000. Today, Secretary of State Antony Blinken implied that the true number is far lower:
These numbers suggest that there were more like 6,000 Americans in Afghanistan when the crisis began, a much lower number than we previously have been led to believe. Further, Blinken argued that quite a few of these may not want to leave:
So the administration is preparing to declare victory, no matter where the final numbers come to rest. We will be told that there weren’t so many Americans in danger after all, and that those who didn’t catch an outgoing flight probably wanted to stay. I doubt whether this approach can work, given the images of chaos and violence that we have all seen. Americans are never going to buy the withdrawal from Afghanistan as a success story. Whether it gets worse than that depends, I think, on whether and to what extent specific stories of Americans stranded in Afghanistan come to light. The administration faces two main dangers. The first is that family members of Americans abandoned in Afghanistan come forward. If there really are several thousand Americans who were left behind, this seems inevitable, with the only question one of degree. If we don’t start hearing from family members, it will suggest that the initial estimates of Americans in Afghanistan were indeed far too high. The second threat comes from the Taliban. They might take American hostages, triggering a crisis like the one that destroyed the Jimmy Carter administration. Or, even worse, the Taliban could post photos and videos of the slaughter of Americans who were left behind by Joe Biden. That is the ultimate nightmare for the administration. Biden’s best hope may be that the Taliban has control over its fighters, and doesn’t want to rock the boat while it consolidates control over its country. Its interests, in other words, may align with Joe Biden’s to the limited extent of not wanting to publicize any atrocities that may be committed against Americans. That is the pass to which we have come.
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Elder Abuse at the LA Times
Posted: 25 Aug 2021 02:53 PM PDT (Steven Hayward)With the odds of Gavin Newsom being recalled in three weeks looking too close to call, the left is panicking about the possibility that Larry Elder might become the next governor of California. A conservative black as the governor of the largest state, making a strong case day by day against progressive government, is the left’s worst nightmare. Hence, they have to stop him. Supposedly he is being investigated for the failure of inaccurate reporting of income. Sometime soon I expect there will be a Me, Too allegation made against him, perhaps by Christine Blasey Ford herself. The Los Angeles Times, a former newspaper, is going all in for the left on this one. Here’s a sample their “news” and editorial coverage of Elder:
The Washington Examiner comments:
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Biden’s approval rating in free fall
Posted: 25 Aug 2021 10:16 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)A few days ago, Joe Biden’s approval rating dipped “below water” for the first time. In other words, more Americans disapproved of his performance as president than approved of it. Now, apparently, it’s not even close. Biden’s approval rating is sinking. USA TODAY/Suffolk University found that 41 percent of Americans approve of Biden’s performance, while 55 percent disapprove. That’s about where Donald Trump stood during most of his presidency, although in Trump’s case there is reason to doubt that the result accurately reflected public opinion, given pollsters’ own performances in the 2016 and 2020 election. Biden is still supported by 87 percent of Democrats. However, only 32 percent of independents say he’s doing a good job. If his support among independents is that low, I suspect that his real approval number is south of 41 percent. As to specific issues, about half of those surveyed approve of Biden’s performance regarding the pandemic. 39 percent approve of his handling of the economy and 26 percent approve of his handling of the Afghan withdrawal. Comparing these results to the overall approval rating, we see that that the latter is in line with how Americans regard Biden’s handling of the economy. Arguably, then, “it’s [still] the economy, stupid.” To that extent, Biden can hope to get back “above water” if the economy improves markedly. But keep in mind that that the Afghanistan debacle hasn’t played out fully. If Americans die there or can’t get out, Biden’s approval number will likely dip as many as ten more points, and even a rip-roaring economy might not get him back on level terms. There’s also the matter of Afghans who worked closely with America. Obviously, their fate is less potentially explosive politically than that of U.S. citizens, but it does matter to Americans. The survey found that 84 percent believe that Afghan translators should be eligible for special refugee visas. Only 10 percent disagreed. These numbers suggest that horror stories about the fate of translators who are left behind will harm Biden politically. As one independent voter put it, “How will the rest of the world view the American people if we can’t even help the people that helped us?” Here is a related question: How can the rest of the world ever trust the U.S. again? The answer, I think, is that it can’t.
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When you’ve lost the New York Times (3)
Posted: 25 Aug 2021 08:10 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)My friend who has been following the New York Times’ coverage of the debacle in Afghanistan provided an update today. He writes: There are at least four articles worth a look. Unfortunately none has been reposted at other sites yet. Probably some will be later. I will briefly summarize the situation. NYT continues to give significant coverage to the plight of American citizens likely to be left behind in Afghanistan. It even mentions that Biden officials don’t want to acknowledge the problem. On top of that, NYT quotes Republicans (Ben Sasse and Michael McCaul) attacking Biden for his desertion of Americans. (NYT rarely quotes Republicans nowadays.) In fact, Republican critics are quoted, although few or no Democrats outside of the administration are. It is extraordinary. The plight of stranded Americans is featured in three NYT stories, one front page. There is also a story on Biden’s use of the Berlin airlift analogy. Although it gives too much credence to the comparison, the headline pointedly notes that the administration is using the Berlin analogy because it is “eager to shift narrative.” We’ll see what happens if and when thousands of Americans are in fact left behind. At this rate, it’s going to be tough to cover that up. Biden appears to have lost the New York Times. Oh well, at least he still has Jennifer Rubin.
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Biden Agonistes
Posted: 25 Aug 2021 07:59 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)For several weeks now, a supposed remark from Joseph Robinette Biden has been making the rounds comparing to the present moment the ignominious fall of Saigon in 1975 (when, incidentally, Senator Biden, “Mister Empathy,” opposed the U.S. taking in Vietnamese refugees who had been on our side in that misbegotten war). Biden is reported to have said, “Nixon and Kissinger got away with it.” By this he means Nixon and Kissinger paid no political price with war-weary Americans for abandoning South Vietnam through a peace treaty that provided a “decent interval” between the withdrawal of all U.S. troops and the collapse of South Vietnam. If this quote is accurate (and it sounds truthful knowing what we know of Biden), a number of observations need to be lodged. It is not a parallel situation in many important ways. First, Nixon was gone by 1975 when the Saigon collapse occurred. But President Gerald Ford didn’t get the blame because he had asked Congress, in a heartfelt speech before a joint session of Congress, for emergency military aid to South Vietnam (which, unlike Afghanistan, had a functional U.S.-trained army that fought honorably), but Democrats in Congress, with a swollen majority after the 1974 midterm election, voted down. (Among the No votes: Delaware Senator Joseph Robinette Biden.) Second, there is not going to be a “decent interval” here. There isn’t an “interval” of any kind, and it is already indecent. Everyone can see the comprehensive failure of the Biden Bug Out. The pending question of the moment is whether U.S. forces will stay beyond August 31 to complete the evacuation of Americans and Afghans who worked for us. But then the second-order question is: if we do succeed in evacuating all Americans from Kabul, will the Taliban then attack our forces at the airport? We may be looking at a repeat of Dien Bien Phu (which Biden probably thinks is the name of a restaurant in Kalorama). Third, the Vietnam debacle did have political consequences—mostly bad ones for Democrats. It didn’t happen all at once, though. There were the killing fields of Cambodia, followed by the “boat people” fleeing Vietnam by the end of the 1970s. As 1980 approached and Jimmy Carter floundered, the foreign policy weakness of liberals was becoming more evident. Recall Ronald Reagan saying in the 1980 campaign that our effort in Vietnam had been “in truth, a noble cause,” which the media thought was an outrage, while more and more Americans thought “damn right.” The Taliban are worthy successors of the Khmer Rouge, and I’m wondering how much longer it will be before we see from an Afghan leader the kind of letter Cambodia’s former prime minister, Sirik Matak, sent to Henry Kissinger in reply to our offer to evacuate him from the country before the Khmer Rouge completed their takeover:
The Khmer Rouge captured Matak, shot him in the stomach, and left him to die of his wounds three days later. Meanwhile, Democrats think things are going just fine. Here’s a news release from the DNC yesterday:
P.S. In 1975, the New York Times ran a story, datelined Phnom Penh, with the headline: “Indochina Without Americans: For Most, a Better Life.” What’s the over-under line on how soon we’ll see this headline repeated about Afghanistan? (The “new” Taliban, etc. . .)
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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Aug 26, 2021 |
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Sponsored By: Gundry MD Top Doctor Reveals Why Your Coffee Isn’t Working Anymore (And What To Drink For More Energy)We all want more energy. One doctor says he’s found the secret and it can easily be done at home. Dr. Gundry says his secret involves a food that’s scientifically shown to “unlock” your physical & mental potential.
Biden Straight Ignores Question About Americans Stranded in Afghanistan, Laughs It Off, Then White House Cuts Audio Feed Because Of CourseIn what seems to be a daily occurrence, President of the United States, Joe Biden, goes in front of the cameras and embarrasses himself and his administration.
“A Short History of Slavery” … This video might just blow your mind
“Oh well, we’re open”: Watch a New Jersey gym owner shrug off hundreds of thousands in fines for defying COVID lockdowns 😤There’s guts, and then there’s American guts, and then there’s whatever mythological, legendary level of American guts this guy is working at.
Great news: Fauci strongly endorses COVID treatment that the media tried to criticize Ron DeSantis for supporting!You love to see this kind of plot twist this late in the pandemic: Anthony Fauci actually agreeing with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on COVID-19 protocol!
Australian churchgoers hit with nearly $50,000 in fines after they defy Sydney’s lockdown ordersAustralia continues to be a hotbed of utterly relentless police-state-style lockdown orders, with congregants at one Sydney-area church recently feeling the full brunt of the government’s COVID zealotry:
Kindergartners in Illinois may soon be learning all about “gender identity” and “cohabitating families”In between snacktime and story hour, kindergartners in Illinois may soon be learning about the enlivening and interesting worlds of LGBT ideology and unmarried cohabitation:
Andrew Cuomo officially had his Emmy rescinded that he was awarded last yearI wasn’t sure they’d actually do it, but they did:
Delta Airlines wants to fine its employees who don’t get the COVID vaccine but it also doesn’t want to use the term “Delta variant” while doing it 😂Poor old Delta Airlines. The COVID crisis was bad enough for air travel to begin with, then the scariest, most fearsome variant of the virus had to be named, well, “Delta.” They can’t catch a break.
American WWII vet reunites with 3 Italians he met as little kids when he was chasing the Nazis back across the AlpsYou want a feel-good story? How about one nearly 80 years in the making?
Police find man passed out with drugs, gun, and 300 CALIFORNIA RECALL BALLOTS in 7-Eleven parking lotA man was found sleeping in his car at a 7-Eleven parking lot (where wild things tend to happen) in Torrance, California on Aug. 16.
Trump released a new ad about Biden and it’s absolutely devastatingGet ready for this and wear protection:
The U.S. has reportedly left behind over 600,000 guns (and more) in Afghanistan … enough to arm the Taliban 8 times over 👀The U.S. retreat from Afghanistan has been, by any reasonable standards, ignominious and embarrassing and a complete tactical and logistical failure. But at least our retreating military forces there weren’t bogged down with all their equipment:
Comedy Central reportedly canceled the “Diversity Day” episode of “The Office,” probably because it mirrors modern aNti-RaCiSm training too dang much 🤣Despite rumors of an Office reboot, there is no way the show would be made today.
A growing number of those pouncing Republicans are demanding for Biden or his officials resign over the mess in AfghanistanMore than a dozen sitting GOP members in Congress have now called for officials within the Biden administration to resign over the whole debacle that’s unfolding in Afghanistan under the lack of direction from the White House.
Weekly neighborhood kickball game is “a beautiful event on the safest street in Colorado Springs,” and that is why it must be destroyed.Remember those halcyon days of neighbors getting together on a sun-dappled tree-lined street to engage in a friendly game in which all ages are welcome and fun is had by all?
A Washington Post humor columnist wrote that he didn’t like Indian food; the paper then issued a “correction” after people got madThe woke mob is famously opposed to essentially every form of humor ever known, which is why the most enduring insignia of Wokeness is an angry feminist declaring: “That’s not funny.” So it should perhaps be unsurprising that the mob would come after a literal humor column that made an impolitic joke about a foreign cuisine:
The Taliban is now promising to fight climate change … I’m dead seriousI guess the Taliban has gotten the memo on covering for a terror regime by virtue signaling.
Someone punked Gavin Newsom by paging him over the intercom at a California airport 🤣These are the types of heroes we need in these uncertain times:
This is why you don’t throw a surprise party for people who conceal carry… 😦This guy was READY to defend his castle:
Oregon’s governor just implemented an OUTDOOR mask mandate regardless of vax status 🤡🤡In clown town, leaders think people will be protected from the deadly Rona by wearing masks outside:
This TikTok explainer video about “libragenders” is a descent into utter madnessYou’ll probably be more confused about “libragender” than you were before watching this video.
America deserves to know who is in chargeIt’s truly a no-win situation for the American people, but for the future credibility of our institutions, I don’t see any way around it.
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com |
Trump: Biden Creating ‘Single Most Catastrophic Border Disaster in History’
Special: #1 Food to Eliminate ‘Bone on Bone’ Pain Dick Morris: AOC Should Challenge Chuck Schumer, Here’s Why Podcast With Rob Carson: Is Taliban Running Biden’s White House? U.S. Embassy Alert Advises U.S. Citizens Not to Go to Kabul Airport Special: Ben Stein’s Free Guide to Surviving Biden’s Double-Digit Inflation UK Advises All Fleeing Afghanistan: Rush to Border Officer Who Killed Ashli Babbitt Revealing Identity Trump’s Big Tech Injunction Request: ‘Strong Basis for Prevailing’ Trump Blasts Dems’ Jan. 6 Records Request as ‘Distraction’ From Biden Failures Special: ‘Imperium’ Machine Stuns World’s Scientists Secretary Blinken Blames Trapped Americans for Waiting to Evacuate Spokesman: Taliban Wants to ‘Forget What Happened in the Past’
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99.) MARK LEVIN
August 25, 2021
On Wednesday’s Mark Levin Show, The cover-up continues today, just like yesterday, with the Biden Administration praising the best airlift in history, which is actually the greatest surrender in American history. Meanwhile, Americans and Afghan nationals continue to be slaughtered on their trek to the Kabul airport. Then, Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s State department is not trustworthy and is placing the onus on “Americans that won’t leave” Afghanistan. Multiple reports have emerged from Americans and Afghani’s warning that they’ll be killed if they leave their homes to get to the airport. Later, Speaker Nancy Pelosi spreads more lies about Republicans stifling the right to vote as they close the loopholes exploited by democrats who want to weaken elections. Also, Democrats are hard on vaccines and mask mandates, but not at the southern border. Yet the media will still portray effective Governors like Ron DeSantis as if he were the Taliban. Afterward, former White House Press Secretary, Kayleigh McEnany calls in to discuss how the Biden Administration lies and is covering up for one another over the Afghanistan surrender.
THIS IS FROM:
Politico
White House to media: We want our props on Afghanistan
Just The News
Watchdog: 75,000 U.S. vehicles, 600,000 weapons, 208 planes left in Afghanistan
Right Scoop
Pentagon spox suggests they will leave behind evacuees that they CAN’T get out
NRO
State Department Reveals the Number of Americans Left to Be Evacuated from Afghanistan
ATR
List: Tax Hikes to Expect in the Dems’ $3.5 Trillion Plan
Fox News
24 California students, 16 parents stranded in Afghanistan after summer vacations
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Anadalu Agency
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Report: US ordering reporters on planes to Doha to cover up failuresUS military police are allegedly banning a German crisis reporter and ten other international journalists from leaving the Kabul airport, although they have safe transport and are leaving at their… | |
DHS insider: Cartels freely enter the US to sex traffic and commit other crimesDepartment of Homeland Security Insider: “Once an informs the U.S. government that they have some type of fear, or that their life is in jeopardy, or they’ll be persecuted, or… | |
CCP warns Biden not to pursue lab leak theoryAn emboldened China warned Joe Biden, who ordered a probe into the Wuhan lab leak theory, that it could be America’s ‘Waterloo’. They compared the new COVID investigation to the… | |
Blinken thinks Taliban might be allies in our counterterrorism efforts – not satireIt is illegal for the United States to negotiate with terrorists so why is the administration doing it? Will no one challenge them as they destroy the country? The administration… | |
Obama judge dealt a MAJOR blow to oil & gas & US survivalOver the past several months, Joe Biden has canceled the XLPipeline and leveled onerous regulations on gas and oil. He followed that up by asking OPEC to churn out more… | |
Hundreds of CA governor recall ballots (and a gun) found in felon’s carNow I can say I told you so! On August 16th, I posted an article telling you how every California voter would receive a mail-in recall ballot. In my opening… | |
AOC wants at least 200,000 anonymous Afghans in the USIn an interview with The Independent, Ocasio-Cortez urged Biden to set a floor of 200,000 visas for Afghans to be evacuated from Afghanistan and brought to the U.S. for permanent… | |
Rescue plane went out empty because of the USA rescue plane went out almost empty because of Taliban checkpoints and US bureaucracy. The checkpoints are the US’s fault also. A 345-seat chartered plane to evacuate Afghans leaves Kabul… | |
Disgusting! Blinken blames those left behind for their predicament during presserSecretary of State Anthony Blinken gave another vague, cover the administration’s butt, press conference today. He made it clear that the US plans to leave Americans and allies behind. Blinken… | |
Reps who flew without permission to Kabul say we can’t get our people outReporters, veterans, and other critics of Biden’s catastrophic withdrawal are uniquely united- the people we are abandoning are not unknown foreigners, but friends who kept us safe in a war-zone,… | |
Parents and children from San Diego are stranded in AfghanistanSan Diego high school students and parents are stranded in Afghanistan. Biden will leave them behind. They face capture and death. At least 24 students from the Cajon Valley Union School… | |
While you were watching Kabul, Biden was destroying our sovereigntyBorder Patrol in Del Rio are overwhelmed with the numbers of illegal aliens/terrorists/criminals/moochers/lawbreakers, aka migrants, crossing the border. There are only 12 agents to cover 245 miles. Their morale has… | |
Portland rioter who nearly killed a man is out of prisonA Portland, Oregon man who was jailed for violently kicking another man in the head and nearly killing him during a Black Lives Matter protest last year is out of… | |
New NY Governor begins her tenure with unscientific mandatesNew York’s new governor Kathy Hochul has passed new draconian mandates out of the gate. Under the guise of safety, Hochul is ignoring the actual science and going for mandates.… | |
CVS teaches employees to rat each other out in the name of racial equityCVS Health is holding a “conscious inclusion workshop” that aims to teach employees how to hold each other “accountable” for non-inclusive behaviors, FOX Business has learned. In other words, they… | |
NBC News reporter: “a very dark period for the United States”NBC News’ chief foreign correspondent Richard Engel said Tuesday that the Biden administration’s ongoing evacuations from Afghanistan following the Taliban’s consolidation of power will be remembered “as a very dark… | |
Speaker Pelosi’s $3.5T bill destroys the right to inheritanceOne of the key beliefs of Marxist ideology is no one should own property privately, and one way to erode private ownership is to destroy inheritance. President Biden has proposed… | |
Truth about the Afghan refugees coming to AmericaJoe Biden and his handlers will allow tens of thousands of Afghan refugees into the country. We don’t know who they are and there is no way to adequately screen… | |
US said Black Hawks left behind weren’t operational and other liesGermany will be out of Kabul by Friday and the US has already started to drawdown. UK troops were only briefed on U.S. withdrawals after the 1st US troops left… | |
House Dems push through an act that will destroy our voting rightsHouse Democrats voted Tuesday to revive so-called federal oversight of state voting-rights laws that had allegedly been weakened by recent Supreme Court decisions, but the measure faces an uncertain future against… | |
Greg Kelly names the Generals who lied to us about AfghanistanGreg Kelly believes the Generals who kept us in Afghanistan for twenty years have lied to us. Mr. Kelly names them in the first clip. In the second clip, he… | |
Biden kneels to honor a violent communist organizationWhat is the President doing kneeling down in honor of a violent, communist organization — Black Lives Matter — that pushes communist social justice? If it’s pandering, it’s the worst… | |
SCOTUS rules on ‘remain in Mexico’ policyThe Supreme Court reinstated the ‘remain in Mexico’ policy for asylum applicants. It requires asylum applicants to wait in Mexico while their claims are evaluated by US authorities. The three… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) UNCOVER DC
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108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
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110.) RIGHT & FREE
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Everything about Wall Drug, arguably the most iconic and long-lasting drugstore in America, exemplifies a doggedness. It took persistence…
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111.) UNITED VOICE
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