Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday September 2, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 9.2.21
Good Thursday morning.
Voters in Florida’s 7th Congressional District say they’re paying too much for their prescriptions, and they want U.S. Rep. Stephanie Murphy to empower Medicare to do something about it.
According to Public Policy Polling survey conducted in the district, nearly nine in 10 voters think that drug prices are too high in the United States.
The belief was nearly universal among Democrats (94%), though It’s a sentiment that crosses party lines — 86% of independents and Republicans said the same.
The survey, conducted on behalf of Protect Our Care, also found that roughly four-fifths of CD 7 voters would support giving Medicare the power to negotiate lower prescription drug prices, and 61% said they would “strongly” support granting it that power.
They said they don’t care if those negotiation powers stifle innovation — an argument commonly made by drug companies. They erred on the side of negotiating 71%-10%. Voters older than 65 — the eligibility age for Medicare — favor negotiation over drug innovation 72%-10%.
The PPP survey covered a long list of Medicare issues, but voters were clear that they expect their congresswoman to back such reforms.
More than two-fifths of those polled said they would be less likely to vote for Murphy if she opposed drug negotiations. That includes 47% of Democrats, 34% of Republicans, and 47% of independents.
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Sunburn will be off Friday, returning to inboxes the Tuesday after Labor Day. We hope you have a relaxing weekend.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
Tweet, tweet:
—@KyleGriffin1: Axios-Ipsos poll: Just 20% of Americans are “not very likely” or “not at all likely” to get a COVID vaccine. That’s the lowest number ever recorded in the poll.
—@KirbyWTweets: Interestingly, Florida now ranks ahead of seven states that went for (Joe) Biden in vaccinations per capita, according to @CDCgov: Illinois (!), Minnesota(!!), Wisconsin, Nevada, Arizona, Michigan and Georgia. Florida is 19th overall and climbing the rankings.
—@GrayRohrer: There’s a nonzero chance both Laura Loomer and Anthony Sabatini will be in Congress in 2023.
Tweet, tweet:
—@MBakerTBTimes: #FSU will host a COVID vaccine clinic before Sunday’s #NotreDame game. First 250 people will get a $50 gift card good for merch at the FSU Bookstore and Seminole Sportshop. Runs from 3-7 Sunday
— DAYS UNTIL —
Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 1; Notre Dame at FSU — 3; NFL regular season begins — 7; Bucs home opener — 7; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 12; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 12; Alabama at UF — 16; Dolphins home opener — 17; Jaguars home opener — 17; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 18; The Problem with Jon Stewart premieres on Apple TV+ — 28; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 29; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 29; MLB regular season ends — 30; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 31; World Series Game 1 — 44; ‘Dune’ premieres — 48; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 55; Florida TaxWatch’s annual meeting begins — 55; Georgia at UF — 58; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 61; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 61; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 64; ‘Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 66; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 67; Miami at FSU — 72; ExcelinEd’s National Summit on Education begins — 77; FSU vs. UF — 86; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 90; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 99; ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 106; ‘The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 111; ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 114; NFL season ends — 129; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 131; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 131; NFL playoffs begin — 135; Super Bowl LVI — 164; Daytona 500 — 171; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 204; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 248; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 267; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 273; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 309; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 321; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 400; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 435.
“Long-haulers are fighting for their future” via Ed Yong of The Atlantic — Long-haulers were the ones who described, defined, and drew attention to their condition: “Patients collectively made long COVID,” two long-haulers wrote in a historical review. Now many feel that their expertise is being ignored and their hard-won knowledge is being excluded from investigations into their own illness. This attitude is slowing down long-COVID-19 research and skewing its focus. Both long-haulers and researchers who work with them talk about flawed studies that paint an inaccurate picture of the condition, or clinics that recommend potentially harmful treatments. Many researchers are missing the full picture because they’re treating long COVID-19 as a completely new entity and ignoring similarities to other complex illnesses such as myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS).
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida COVID-19 update: 19,048 cases reported and a steep dip in number of hospital patients” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Florida on Wednesday reported to the CDC 19,048 more COVID-19 cases added Tuesday. The state also reported 10 new deaths. In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,269,502 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 44,571 deaths statewide. On average, the state has added 263 deaths and 19,908 cases each day in the past seven days. During Florida’s third peak, COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations appear to be at record highs but reports from the Florida Department of Health show ‘artificially’ few deaths in recent weeks.
—“Florida may be emerging from its worst COVID-19 surge” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel
“Ron DeSantis: COVID-19 death reporting questions are partisan distraction” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis‘ statewide tour promoting monoclonal antibody therapies for COVID-19 has continued into September, as has scrutiny over how the state reports COVID-19 deaths. The Miami Herald on Friday reported the agency had reworked how the Health Department tallies COVID-19 deaths, reporting them by the date they died rather than the date they were reported. As Florida Politics reported a month prior, that has the effect of decreasing the count of fatalities in the “Previous Week” column on the state’s weekly reports. Florida has opened at least 21 sites offering monoclonal antibodies, a therapy available to people at risk for severe infections when they test positive.
“DeSantis: Rising COVID-19 deaths in Florida ‘a really terrible thing’” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — DeSantis said the rising COVID-19 death toll in Florida is “a really terrible thing,” but focused on preventing future deaths rather than talking about the thousands of Floridians who have died recently. DeSantis was in Viera to continue his tour promoting monoclonal antibody treatment as a way to greatly temper COVID-19 infections and reduce the risk of death. The Governor said that it was “a really sad thing.” But he expressed no sympathy or condolences toward families, nor any remorse regarding the skyrocketing numbers of people dying of COVID-19 in Florida recently.
“Nikki Fried holds moment of silence for Floridians lost to COVID-19” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Fried hosted a moment of silence Wednesday to remember the nearly 45,000 Floridians who have died with COVID-19. The CDC reports 44,561 deaths as of Tuesday afternoon. While the CDC still reports daily COVID-19 data for Florida, the state Health Department has reduced its reporting frequency to once a week. Fried now frequently reports the state data from the CDC, saying she’s doing the Governor’s job. She noted the children, daughters, husbands, teachers, health care workers, and more who have died due to the pandemic.
“After court ruling, Ashley Moody jumps into Florida’s mask mandate legal fight” via Ana Ceballos of the Tampa Bay Times — Moody injected her legal opinion into Florida’s ongoing court battle over school mask mandates, adding noise to an increasingly political fight. Moody, a Republican ally of DeSantis, said school districts must comply with a state rule that says parents must have the ability to opt their kids out of mask requirements “unless and until the judiciary declares them invalid.” Her legal opinion comes days after a Leon County judge ruled that DeSantis and his administration “acted without legal authority” when issuing and enforcing a blanket ban on mask mandates.
“DeSantis might find a friendlier court in North Florida for his appeal of COVID-19 mask ruling” via Rafael Olmeda of South Florida Sun-Sentinel — From the minute Leon County Circuit Judge John J. Cooper announced his decision upholding the right of school districts to mandate masks for students, an appeal seemed to be inevitable. Gov. DeSantis is standing by his position that those mandates violate the state’s Parents’ Bill of Rights, and he’s confident that higher courts will see things his way and restore his ban on mandates. “We’ll end up getting it back,” he said. On the surface, the politics are on his side. Democrats make up a majority of mask-mandate supporters, but the judges who will rule on any appeal are all Republican. Party politics is not supposed to matter.
—”Florida’s GOP strongholds buck DeSantis on virus measures” via Max Greenwood of The Hill
“Requiring customers to be vaccinated can draw $5,000 fines starting soon in Florida” via Kirby Wilson of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida businesses and governments that require proof of COVID-19 vaccination from customers or members of the public will soon face $5,000 fines. Earlier this year, the Republican-led Florida Legislature passed a bill, SB 2006, banning businesses, governments and schools from requiring “vaccine passports,” essentially proof that people seeking their services have gotten a COVID-19 vaccine. In May, DeSantis signed that bill into law. The legislation allowed the state’s Department of Health to issue fines “not to exceed $5,000 per violation.”
— CORONA LOCAL —
“South Florida victims of the COVID-19 surge: Teachers, retirees, pastors, priests and more” via David Ovalle of the Miami Herald — A longtime science teacher at South Dade High with a passion for fishing and the outdoors. A young mother who served as a youth pastor in Florida City. There was even a Catholic priest — who ministered to the sick at Baptist Hospital. They were police officers, legal office clerks, and cafeteria workers. Most were parents or grandparents. Many were immigrants and toiled anonymously to build better lives for their families in South Florida. Their common thread: They are among the most recent victims of the COVID-19 pandemic, fueled by the highly contagious delta variant, which has ravaged the state during the past two months. Most of the victims were not vaccinated.
“Orlando VA opens mobile ICU amid a surge of hospitalizations, deaths” via Caroline Catherman of the Orlando Sentinel — The Orlando Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center began treating patients in a mobile intensive care unit after increases in COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 patients. “This mobile ICU will allow the Orlando VA to continue to provide necessary care to inpatients during this surge of Veteran hospitalizations,” wrote Heather Frebe. “The Orlando VA began using the mobile ICU for patient care on August 31, 2021, and will continue to operate it as long as the unit is needed.” On Wednesday, 16 of the hospital’s 24 ICU beds were occupied. The mobile unit is currently set up with beds for 10 patients, though it can treat up to 18 if needed. Three of the 10 mobile ICU beds are currently in use.
“‘The virus is winning’: Hospital CEO says Brevard County School Board member misrepresented COVID-19 data” via Amira Sweilem of Florida Today — Parrish Medical Center CEO George Mikitarian said a Brevard County School Board member who claimed that the worst of COVID-19 could be behind us while arguing against a classroom mask mandate on Monday had misrepresented hospital data. Mikitarian did not name the school board member in his statement Wednesday posted on Parrish Hospital’s Facebook page, but it was School Board Vice-Chair Matt Susin who had introduced the data during the Monday emergency school board meeting. Susin had argued that hospital data showed the virus may have already reached its peak, that hospitalizations were decreasing, and that the worst of the pandemic may be in the past.
“Polk County hospitals arrange for coolers amid surge in COVID-19 deaths” via Sara Megan-Walsh of The Ledger — Polk County’s hospitals have refrigerated coolers on standby in case the COVID-19 surge tests its morgue capacity. AdventHealth’s Central Florida Division sent an email to emergency managers stating it reached capacity at its morgues due to an influx of deaths. The hospital system also rented refrigerated coolers at 10 of their sites in Polk, Orange, Osceola, Seminole and Volusia counties. “These coolers are also quickly becoming filled,” the email reads. “We believe this backup is due to a throughput slowdown at local funeral homes, which is causing us to hold decedents for a longer period of time.”
“Hillsborough Schools tell state: We had every right to order masks” via Marlene Sokol and Jeffrey S. Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — Hillsborough County School District leaders say emergency conditions in the schools gave them the legal right to impose a strict masking rule on Aug. 18. They also reject the notion that, in requiring medical documentation before a student can opt out of wearing a mask, they have violated the state’s new Parents’ Bill of Rights law. To the contrary, Hillsborough is following the law’s intent, the district said in a letter Wednesday to state education commissioner Richard Corcoran. The letter noted that the law allows school boards to take action that is “reasonable and necessary to achieve a compelling state interest.”
“Pinellas County Schools to start pulling district staff to work as substitute teachers” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Pinellas County Public Schools will start pulling district staff members from their assigned offices to serve as substitute teachers starting next Wednesday amid educator absences due to COVID-19. In an email obtained by Florida Politics, district staff members were notified of the change and asked to complete a survey indicating their school level preference by Wednesday at noon. “In an effort to support our sites during this challenging time, we will begin utilizing all certified district staff as of Wednesday, Sept. 8, to assist in filling teacher absences,” the email reads.
“Florida dermatologist urged parents to lie to schools to avoid COVID-19 quarantines” via Tony Mixon of the Panama City News-Herald — Bay District Schools Superintendent Bill Husfelt recently addressed misinformation that was spreading online about the system’s COVID-19 quarantine protocols following social media posts by a local dermatologist. Dr. Jon Ward stirred up controversy during the weekend after he made a Facebook post urging parents to lie to school nurses to avoid quarantines. The post led to calls from concerned parents to the school system. Ward has backtracked on his statements since they caused a rift.
Huh? — “Washington County elections supervisor promotes ivermectin on personal Facebook” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Carol Finch Rudd posted on Facebook sharing her and her husband’s experience with ivermectin, an antiparasitic drug some people are using to treat COVID-19 despite federal warnings against it. Online misinformation, largely on social media, touts the antiparasitic as an alternative treatment for COVID-19. However, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration cautions that the drug has not been adequately tested for treating COVID-19. And some are taking a more accessible, animal-strength version of ivermectin meant for deworming horses, cows, and other livestock, leading to hospitalizations.
“Key West’s royal king and queen campaign canceled” via Mandy Miles of Keys Weekly — There will be no king and queen fundraising campaign for Key West’s Fantasy Fest this year. The Royal Campaign, an annual eight-week fundraising campaign for A.H. Monroe leading up to the island’s Fantasy Fest celebration in October, has been canceled, the nonprofit’s board of directors announced Friday afternoon. “In an abundance of caution and recognizing its health services mission, the board of directors of A.H. of Monroe County, effective immediately, has canceled The Royal Campaign of Fantasy Fest 2021,” states a news release.
—”COVID-19 outbreak closes Ed White High, third Duval school to shift to virtual classes” via Beth Reese Cravey of The Florida Times-Union
—”Daytona Beach police officer dies of COVID-19” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel
—”Jacksonville Beach police sergeant is the area’s third officer to die from COVID-19 recently” via Dan Scanlan of The Florida Times-Union
— STATEWIDE —
Assignment editors — Fried will host a roundtable on water quality in the Tampa Bay region and its impact on the environment and wildlife. Also taking part is Dr. Cynthia Stringfield, Senior VP of Animal Health, Conservation and Education at ZooTampa, as well as wildlife and environmental advocates. Fried will give a COVID-19 update following the roundtable, 3 p.m., Lowry Park, 1101 W Sligh Ave., Tampa. It will be livestreamed at Facebook.com/FDACS. RSVP to comms@fdacs.gov.
Next Surgeon General could get bigger paycheck — Florida’s next Surgeon General could be paid more than the $140,000 salary earned by Scott Rivkees. As Arek Sarkissian of POLITICO Florida reported, lawmakers are considering raising the position’s pay to attract top-tier candidates to replace Rivkees. No specific amounts were mentioned, but House Speaker Chris Sprowls is on board with the idea. “I fully expect and would support paying the surgeon general more,” he said. Sen. Aaron Bean, who chairs the chamber’s Appropriations Subcommittee on Health and Human Services, said, “We don’t just want a doctor — we want a super doctor. We want a Superman in a white lab coat.”
“Amid COVID-19, bill would make having fake vaccination card a felony in Florida” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Rep. Michael Grieco, a Miami Beach Democrat, proposed the measure last week for consideration during the 2022 legislative session, which will start in January. Under the bill, people could face third-degree felony charges if they create or possess a “certificate, card, or other physical or electronic media that falsely indicates that the holder of the certificate, card, or other physical or electronic medium has been vaccinated against a specific disease, with the intent to defraud.” While the bill comes during the pandemic, it is not limited to COVID-19 vaccinations.
“Concerns over staffing shortages, COVID-19 impact dominate Pasco County delegation meeting” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — The Pasco County Legislative Delegation met Wednesday morning to prep for the 2022 Session. In addition to clearing a local bill and recognizing Senate President Wilton Simpson, who completes his last term next year, lawmakers also heard from local officials and community leaders concerned about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Amanda Maggard, representing AdventHealth, said that while the community was optimistic to see recent monoclonal antibody treatment sites, she hopes the delegation addresses health care worker shortages this upcoming Session.
Happening today — The Palm Beach County legislative delegation will meet: Sens. Lori Berman, Gayle Harrell, Tina Polsky, Bobby Powell; Reps. Joe Carollo, Mike Caruso, Omari Hardy, Rick Roth, David Silvers, Kelly Skidmore, Emily Slosberg, John Snyder and Matt Willhite, 10 a.m., Florida Atlantic University, Acura Club, second floor of the FAU stadium, 777 Glades Road, Boca Raton.
New and renewed lobbying registration:
Brian Ballard, Brad Burleson, Ballard Partners: Fort Lauderdale Downtown Development Authority, Shiftkey
Heathcliff Beach, Avail Strategies: Mandiant — FireEye
Matt Bryan, David Daniel, Jeff Hartley, Lisa Hurley, Teye Reeves, Smith Bryan & Myers: FullBloom
Crista Cole: Amazon.com Services
Mia Conway-Vogel: Roxbury Airport
Laura Jacobs Donaldson, Manson Bolves Donaldson Varn: BlueTriton Brands
Thomas Hobbs, Ramba Consulting Group: Florida Financial Services Association
Jeff Johnston, Amanda Stewart, Anita Berry, Johnston & Stewart Government Strategies: Manatee County
— 2022 —
“Wealthy GOP donors flock to DeSantis as presidential speculation swirls” via Allan Smith and Henry J. Gomez of NBC News — DeSantis has cemented himself as the face of GOP opposition to anti-COVID-19 mandates — a position that is winning over not only rank-and-file voters ahead of the 2024 presidential primaries but also some of the Republican Party’s wealthiest donors. How the race shapes up will first and foremost be determined by whether former President Donald Trump decides to run. But many donors are investing early in potential candidates like DeSantis, who polling shows to be the leading Trump alternative in the prospective presidential field.
Tweet, tweet:
“Fried credits commitment to transparency to tardy financial filing” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Republicans criticized Fried for a tardy filing of financial disclosures. But the Democratic candidate for Governor said a commitment to transparency made her take her time. “We were just trying to be as transparent, and they (Republicans) were just not used to that,” she told reporters Wednesday. Fried on Tuesday filed her Form 6 disclosures for 2020 on the last day of a two-month grace period before the Florida Commission of Ethics started charging daily fines. The disclosures were due July 1. Fried also amended her 2019 disclosures to include a retirement fund with the state.
“Florida’s first Latina Governor? This Democratic lawmaker considers bid” via Bianca Padró Ocasio of the Tampa Bay Times — It was around the time Florida Democrats suffered blistering defeats in Miami-Dade in the 2020 election that Sen. Annette Taddeo began mulling a run for Governor. But she’s not quite ready to jump in, she says, despite the fact she doesn’t “think it’s a secret” her name comes up as a potential top contender in 2022. “If I were to become the nominee, clearly, we have a lot of opportunity to have a lot of excitement, and with Val Demings also running [for U.S. Senate] … I believe that’s what it’s going to take,” Taddeo said.
“Moody officially files for reelection as Attorney General” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Moody filed for reelection Wednesday as Florida’s top cop. Thus far, Moody’s path to reelection is without many obstacles. With no credible challenger in the race, political prognosticators expect the office to remain in Republican hands for at least a fourth consecutive term. Moody, elected in 2018, focused on various issues, including human trafficking and opioid addiction, during her first term. A former lawyer, federal prosecutor and judge, she proved herself a fundraising machine, outpacing all statewide candidates except DeSantis this year.
“Stephanie Murphy to head Florida Democratic Party voter protection and democracy program” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — U.S. Rep. Murphy will chair the Florida Democratic Party’s Democracy and Voter Protection Program. The Winter Park Democrat takes on the role as she prepares for a significant election cycle for herself and the state party. “We are thrilled that Congresswoman Murphy is going to lead us in this effort,” said Florida Democratic Party Chair Manny Diaz. Murphy’s own immigrant story, rescued as an immigrant from Vietnam as her family fled by boat, played high in a party announcement of her role. Florida Democrats took a beating in 2020 as Republicans painted the party as pro-socialist; many immigrants with roots in South American countries turned on Democrats as a result.
This clown — “Far-right lawmaker wants Florida to copy new Texas abortion restrictions and get publicity for his next campaign” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — State Rep. Sabatini said Wednesday he would introduce legislation that would duplicate Texas’ strict new anti-abortion law in Florida. It would ban most abortions. He and other anti-abortion lawmakers have repeatedly tried and failed to do the same thing before. The measure keeps getting killed in the Republican-controlled Florida Legislature. But there are differences this year: The U.S. Supreme Court allowed the Texas law to go into effect. And the Supreme Court will take up abortion in its next term, with the possibility that it could significantly reduce abortion rights.
“Laura Loomer swaps races, will challenge Daniel Webster in CD 11” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Right-wing activist and once-defeated Loomer is switching up her 2022 plans, now mounting a Primary challenge against Republican U.S. Rep. Webster in Florida’s 11th Congressional District. Loomer had previously filed to seek a rematch against Democratic U.S. Rep. Lois Frankel in Florida’s 21st Congressional District. Loomer emerged from a contested GOP Primary last year for the right to challenge Frankel. But Frankel handily defeated Loomer last November, pulling in 59% of the vote and topping Loomer by nearly 20 percentage points. Loomer likely saw the writing on the wall heading into 2022. CD 21 leans heavily Democratic, though all districts are subject to redrawn boundaries ahead of next year’s contest.
“Corinna Balderramos Robinson files against Brian Mast in CD 18” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Balderramos Robinson announced she’s running for Congress in Rep. Mast’s district. “Service to my country has been at the heart of who I am my entire life,” Balderramos Robinson said. A retired Army Major, she last year ran for state Senate against Sen. Gayle Harrell. She secured the Democratic nomination but lost to the Republican incumbent by 18 percentage points in the General Election. Now Balderramos Robinson has her sights on Washington. Democrats have long viewed Florida’s 18th Congressional District as potentially competitive ground.
“Statehouse races heat up during changing of guard in Duval County” via David Bauerlein of the Florida Times-Union — The race for the state Legislature is tossing and turning in Duval County contests that will bring the biggest changing of the guard in years because term limits will prevent longtime Sens. Audrey Gibson and Bean from running for the first time in a decade. The race to fill the seat of Gibson is shaping up as a more contested affair. City Council member Reggie Gaffney has already started raising money for a campaign, and Rep. Tracie Davis said she will file soon to join the fray. Jacksonville City Council member Garrett Dennis said he plans to file as a candidate for the House seat filled now by Davis.
Dean Black backs Cord Byrd for HD 11, eyes 2024 run — Duval County GOP Chair Black had all but declared for the House District 11 race, but on Wednesday, he announced he would put his aspirations on hold to let Rep. Byrd serve one final term. Black never filed paperwork to run for HD 11, but he had amassed more than $170,000 in a political committee and had recently earned the endorsement of one of his would-be primary opponents. Still, his candidacy was contingent on Byrd sticking to his plans to run in Senate District 4. That didn’t pan out, but Black was cordial. “I am thrilled that my friend Representative Cord Byrd has decided to return to the Florida House. Our region is well served with Cord in the Legislature, and he has my complete and total support for another term,” he said. While he will not run this cycle, he’s likely to seek the seat in 2024, when Byrd faces term limits. If he does, his committee stockpile will give him a solid head start.
“Young Republican Jake Hoffman to challenge Susan Valdes in HD 62” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Hoffman is challenging Rep. Valdes for her seat in Florida House District 62, he announced Wednesday. Hoffman, who has served for the past three years as president of the Tampa Bay Young Republicans, has been a vocal opponent to lockdowns and various other COVID-19 restrictions throughout the pandemic affecting small businesses. “There were virtually no politicians fighting against these crazy mandates,” Hoffman said in a campaign announcement. Hoffman co-founded Invasion Digital Media, a company that partners with the National Football League and the Ultimate Fighting Championship to sell digital fitness programs.
“Jennifer Wilson joins HD 66 race to replace Nick DiCeglie” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Wilson, a lawyer and lobbyist, is the third Republican to join the race for Florida House District 66. The third-generation Floridian joins GOP candidates Berny Jacques and Alen Tomczak in the race to replace Rep. DiCeglie, who is leaving office to run for the Senate. What I love most is helping people,” said Wilson of her motivation to run. “Throughout my life and career, I have been blessed with opportunities to help those who have trusted me to be their voice and champion. That’s exactly what I will continue doing when I am elected to the Florida House.” Wilson told Florida Politics, if elected, she plans to focus on veterans’ issues, the environment, public safety, child safety and welfare, including support for law enforcement, among other issues.
“Michael Hepburn: Miami Commissioner Jeffrey Watson ‘a liar’ for reversing pledge to leave office” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Hepburn says he isn’t disappointed that the man Miami officials installed last year to fill a vacancy on the City Commission may not keep his promise to vacate his seat once his one-year term ends in November. But with just over two months from the city election, and with the newly announced backing Wednesday of The Collective PAC, a committee dedicated to boosting Black participation and representation in politics nationwide, that isn’t really his focus either. Hepburn is running to replace Jeffrey Watson, whom City Commissioners appointed last November to succeed Keon Hardemon.
Kristi Noem to headline Florida Right to Life banquet in October — The South Dakota Governor will be the keynote speaker for the 2021 Florida Right to Life “Love for Life” Banquet on Thursday, Oct. 14 at the Rosen Shingle Creek Resort in Orlando. Admission is $125; sponsorships start at $1,500. More information at frtl.org/loveforlife2021.
— CORONA NATION —
“COVID-19 hospitalization rates rise as delta variant continues to spread” via Janie Haseman of USA Today — In some states, the number of people being admitted to the hospital with confirmed COVID-19 had topped levels not seen since the winter, when cases, hospitalizations, and deaths last surged most significantly in America. COVID-19 vaccines, which are available to everyone in the U.S. age 12 and older, are extremely effective at preventing death and hospitalization. In recent weeks, vaccination rates have risen alongside cases and hospitalizations; but just under half the country is still not fully vaccinated. The rise in COVID-19 patients has pushed some hospitals to capacity, leaving less room and staff for people with other medical needs.
“Unvaccinated people should not travel Labor Day weekend, CDC director says” via Eve Chen of USA Today — The CDC is urging Americans to reconsider their Labor Day travel plans, particularly if they aren’t vaccinated, amid one of the worst COVID-19 surges of the pandemic. “First and foremost, if you are unvaccinated, we would recommend not traveling,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said. The CDC recommends people who aren’t fully vaccinated hold off on traveling “because travel increases your chance of getting and spreading COVID-19.” Additionally, anyone sick with coronavirus symptoms is urged to stay home, even if they’ve been vaccinated. The CDC has said fully vaccinated Americans can travel while wearing face masks.
—”Americans are stocking up on toilet paper again” via Jaewon Kang and Sharon Terlep of The Wall Street Journal
“Why can’t America fix its COVID-19 testing problems?” via Dylan Scott of Vox — A year and a half after the COVID-19 pandemic began, the United States is facing a new version of the same problem that stymied its response from the beginning: We aren’t testing enough to catch every case or surveil the virus and its new variants. Nationwide, about 11% of tests are now coming back positive, up from 2% in mid-June. Experts have said the positive test rate should be below 10% and preferably much lower to be confident most cases are being caught.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Tens of billions of dollars in pandemic aid for hospitals and nursing homes sits unused” via Amy Goldstein of The Washington Post — Tens of billions of dollars designated by Congress to help hospitals, nursing homes, and other health care providers stave off financial hardship from the coronavirus pandemic are sitting unused, because the Biden administration has not released the money. As many hospitals bulge again with COVID-19 patients, a wide swath of the health care industry is exasperated that federal health officials have not made available any more of the aid since Biden took office. About $44 billion from a Provider Relief Fund created last year remains unspent, along with $8.5 billion Congress allotted in March for medical care in rural areas.
“Wall Street South builds its own New York to lure younger crowd” via Amanda L. Gordon, Sridhar Natarajan and Natalie Wong of Bloomberg — After the COVID-19 pandemic supercharged, a migration of Manhattan elite local developers and entrepreneurs are working to transform once-sleepy West Palm Beach into a thriving center of finance. That means new power-dining perches, after-work bars, gleaming towers, and even an entirely new neighborhood that nods to Manhattan’s West Village. NYU Langone and Mount Sinai have doctors on the ground. One private school has hired an enrollment director straight from the Upper East Side’s Hewitt School. Talks have begun for a university campus modeled after New York’s Cornell Tech.
“Apple asks all U.S. employees to report vaccination status” via Mark Gurman of Bloomberg — Apple Inc. is asking all U.S. employees to report their vaccination status, marking the latest move in a COVID-19 campaign that has stopped short of mandating shots. The iPhone maker has asked the employees to report their status “voluntarily” by mid-September, regardless of whether they work remotely or from an office. The company said it’s using the data to inform its COVID-19 response efforts and protocols. Apple previously asked employees in California, Washington and New Jersey to comply with local regulations. Unlike several of its peers in technology, Apple doesn’t require vaccines.
“Florida’s federal unemployment benefits end Monday” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — The federal unemployment benefits that have helped millions of Floridians stay afloat during the coronavirus pandemic run out Monday. The state’s jobless agency said Wednesday that two key federal programs end Sept. 6: Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, which paid up to $275 per week for gig workers and others who aren’t eligible for state assistance, and Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation, which extended the number of weeks someone would be eligible to receive state benefits. The programs are set to expire on Labor Day for millions of Americans across the country.
— MORE CORONA —
“When will the delta surge end?” via Apoorva Mandavilli, Benjamin Mueller and Shalini Venugopal Bhagat of The New York Times — The United States has entered the fourth wave of the pandemic. As the vaccination campaign lags and the contagious Delta variant spreads, cases and hospitalizations are at their highest since last winter. COVID-19 deaths, too, are on a steady incline. After every other peak has come a trough, however, often for reasons that were not immediately obvious. In Britain, where the variant is also the dominant form of the coronavirus, daily cases fell from a peak of 60,000 in mid-July to half that within two weeks, though they have since been climbing again.
What Christina Pushaw is reading — “Massive randomized study is proof that surgical masks limit coronavirus spread, authors say” via Adam Taylor and Ben Guarino of The Washington Post — The authors of a study based on an enormous randomized research project in Bangladesh say their results offer the best evidence yet that widespread wearing of surgical masks can limit the spread of the coronavirus in communities. The preprint paper, which tracked more than 340,000 adults across 600 villages in rural Bangladesh, is by far the largest randomized study on the effectiveness of masks. Its authors say this provides conclusive, real-world evidence: mask-wearing can significantly limit the spread of symptomatic COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.
—”Idaho hospitals are ‘beyond constrained’ by COVID-19. Gov. Brad Little deploys National Guard” via Hayat Norimine of the Idaho Statesman
—”Alaska surpasses previous hospitalizations record and reports deaths of 6 with COVID-19, including woman in her 20s” via Annie Berman and Zaz Hollander of Anchorage Daily News
—”Hawaii health officials warn of oxygen shortages as COVID-19 hospitalizations rise” via Siladitya Ray of Forbes
—”Kentucky continues to shatter its COVID-19 hospitalization records. 23 more deaths.” via Alex Acquisto of the Lexington Herald-Leader
“Even survivors of milder COVID-19 face heightened risk of kidney damage, study finds” via Hannah Knowles of The Washington Post — A new study provides grim insight into “long COVID,” finding that even survivors of less-serious COVID-19 cases had a heightened risk of kidney damage. The dangers increase with the severity of infection but extend even to those who were not hospitalized. Risks included “end-stage kidney disease,” in which the organs can no longer filter blood without transplant or regular dialysis. The researchers wrote that given the massive scale of coronavirus infections in the United States and worldwide, “the numbers of people with long COVID-19 in need of post-COVID-19 care will likely be staggering and will present substantial strain on already overwhelmed health systems.”
“Joe Rogan says he has COVID-19, took ivermectin” via Amy Gehrt of the Tampa Bay Times — Rogan, a veteran comic and podcaster, says he tested positive COVID-19 just days after he performed in Tampa. Rogan, who hosts the popular Spotify podcast The Joe Rogan Experience, posted a video to his official Instagram account Wednesday to announce he has the coronavirus. “We immediately threw the kitchen sink at it,” he said. “All kinds of meds. Monoclonal antibodies, ivermectin, Z-Pak, prednisone — everything. And I also got an NAD drip and a vitamin drip. I did that three days in a row, and so here we are on Wednesday, and I feel great.”
“Europe’s tourist hotspots stay open to Americans, for now” via Giovanni Legorano and Nick Kostov of The Wall Street Journal — Many European countries are in no hurry to close the door to American tourists, despite a new European Union recommendation to national authorities to halt nonessential travel from the U.S. The EU’s recommendations for travel rules aren’t binding on the bloc’s 27 member countries. Major tourist destinations Spain and Greece said on Tuesday they would stay open for American visitors for the coming weeks. Others, including France and Italy, said they have no immediate plans to change their rules for travel from the U.S. Europe’s leading tourism nations, in most cases, allow U.S. tourists to enter without quarantine if they can show proof of vaccination against COVID-19, recovery from the virus or a negative test result.
“Travel agencies are having a moment amid COVID-19 chaos” via Scott McCartney of The Wall Street Journal — Travel has grown difficult thanks to virus-related complexity, uncertainty, cancellations, delays, border restrictions, and testing requirements. As a result, many travelers booking a beach getaway or other trips turn to professionals to help them with plans. Travel advisers are cool again. Do-it-yourself booking and declining commissions paid by airlines shrank travel agencies beginning in the 1990s. The industry has proved resilient, and now it’s hot. Travelers are itching to go somewhere after many sat grounded for a year or more. And they have myriad questions about what you have to do to travel internationally and how you can protect yourself against disappointment.
“Paramount delays ‘Top Gun’ sequel amid resurgent coronavirus” via Kelly Gilblom of Bloomberg — ViacomCBS Inc. moved the release date for “Top Gun: Maverick” into next year as Hollywood continues to wrestle with the pandemic that’s kept many people from theaters. The highly anticipated sequel featuring action star Tom Cruise was expected to debut on Nov. 19 and will instead move to May 27. The change was part of a broader reshuffling of dates at Viacom’s Paramount Pictures studio. “Mission: Impossible 7,” also featuring Cruise, moved to Sept. 30 of next year from the May date “Top Gun” has taken. “Jackass Forever” shifted to Feb. 4 from this October.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Mitch McConnell: Joe Biden ‘is not going to be removed from office’” via Jordain Carney of The Hill — McConnell shot down calls from within his own party to try to impeach Biden, pointing to next year’s midterm election as a potential check on the administration. “Well, look, the president is not going to be removed from office. There’s a Democratic House, a narrowly Democratic Senate. That’s not going to happen,” McConnell said when asked if Biden’s handling of the drawdown in Afghanistan merits impeachment and if he would support it. “There isn’t going to be an impeachment,” he added.
“Moody keeps up opposition to Biden border ‘chaos’” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Republican Attorneys General continue to stand opposed to the immigration policies of Biden‘s administration. Florida is joining a coalition of 17 states attempting to thwart a Biden administration effort to obtain a stay on a court decision reinstating the pre-Biden “Remain in Mexico” policies. “Instead of following the direction of the court to enforce federal law, President Biden is seeking an emergency order to keep his illegal policies in place. Every day he ignores federal law, we become less safe,” Moody asserted. AGs from Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah and West Virginia all signed onto the brief in support of the suit from Texas and Louisiana.
“Ann Coulter effusively praises Biden’s Afghanistan speech: Unlike Donald Trump, he ‘had the balls’ to withdraw” via Michael Luciano of Mediaite — Biden had just concluded his address to the nation on the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, ending a war that had lasted 20 years. The president has been criticized for failing to anticipate the rapid crumbling of Afghan security forces in the face of the Taliban’s advance. That caused a chaotic scene at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, where the U.S. military hurried to evacuate more than 123,000 Americans and Afghans despite being surrounded by the Taliban and ISIS-K. After the president’s address, Coulter took to Twitter and thanked Biden “for keeping a promise Trump made but then abandoned.”
— EPILOGUE: TRUMP —
“Trump, Pam Bondi and $25,000: The investigation that never was” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — One of Florida’s higher-profile political scandals is making national headlines again. We’re talking about the infamous and improper $25,000 check Trump cut to Bondi’s campaign back in 2013, when Bondi’s office had been asked to investigate some of Trump’s sketchy moneymaking ventures. Trump’s team cut the check from one of his charitable foundations, which federal law prohibits. Tax-exempt charities can’t donate to political committees.
— CRISIS —
“Intel shows extremists to attend Capitol rally” via Michael Balsamo, Eric Tucker and Lisa Mascaro of The Associated Press — Far-right extremist groups like the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers are planning to attend a rally later this month at the U.S. Capitol that is designed to demand “justice” for the hundreds of people who have been charged in connection with January’s insurrection. As a result, U.S. Capitol Police have been discussing whether the large perimeter fence erected outside the Capitol after January’s riot will need to be put back up. Officials have been discussing security plans that involve reconstructing the fence as well as another plan that does not involve a fence, the people said.
— D.C. MATTERS —
The national Republican Party produced a video directed at Afghanistan veterans, telling them their service was not in vain. Prominently featured in the five-minute clip are two members of the Florida Delegation: U.S. Rep. Mast and U.S. Rep. Michael Waltz.
Both Congressmen are veterans of the war in Afghanistan.
“Veterans, Goldstar families, victims of 911 — their sacrifices were not in vain. A whole generation of Americans have grown up, not worried about planes flying into buildings, not worried about suicide bombers on school buses,” Waltz says in the video.
Mast echoed the sentiment, saying their sacrifice “will never fade away.”
— LOCAL NOTES —
“City Council member LeAnna Cumber could upend 2023 Jacksonville mayoral race” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — Cumber filed papers to form a political committee as she considers a run for Jacksonville mayor in 2023, a development that would upend any easy path to victory for the growing list of Republicans interested in the race. More than anything, Cumber’s potential candidacy is a challenge to JAX Chamber President Daniel Davis, who is widely expected to run as the inheritor of the city’s right-of-center political establishment and the donors that come with it. He, like Cumber, is not yet an official candidate, but he has already amassed nearly $2.5 million to a state political committee he controls.
“Will Chris Latvala challenge Dave Eggers for Pinellas commission? He’s not ruling it out.” via Tracey McManus of the Tampa Bay Times — On Tuesday, after the Tampa Bay Times reported that the first meeting of the Pinellas County Redistricting Board would not be video recorded, State Rep. Latvala blasted the county’s decision. But he used the opportunity to call out Commission Chair Eggers, a fellow Republican, who is up for reelection in November 2022. “The Pinellas County administrator should reverse course and allow for full transparency,” Latvala stated in the news release of the redistricting board process. Latvala, term-limited from the state House next year, already announced he will run in 2024 for Pinellas County Commission District 5 when incumbent Republican Commissioner Karen Seel said she plans to leave office after 25 years in the seat.
“Second Republican files to challenge Pat Gerard in 2022” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — A second Republican has entered the race to challenge Gerard for her District 2 seat on the Pinellas County Commission. Brian Scott, president of Escot Bus Lines, filed for the race Tuesday. In the race, he joins fellow Republican Debbie Buschman, the Lunch Pal coordinator for Pinellas County Schools. Gerard has not yet filed for reelection but is expected to. In a statement to the Tampa Bay Times announcing his candidacy Wednesday, Scott said he had to fight to keep his family business, founded by his parents in 1983, alive during the COVID-19 pandemic. As a charter bus executive, Scott previously served as a board member on the Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority. He also served on the Pinellas County Parks and Conservation Advisory Board.
“Orange-Osceola State Attorney Monique Worrell unveils unit to clear backlog of traffic homicide cases” via Cristóbal Reyes of the Orlando Sentinel — The Orange-Osceola State Attorney’s Office has created a traffic homicide unit to clear a backlog of dozens of cases dating to 2019, State Attorney Worrell announced. The new division will be overseen by prosecutor David Fear, who will take the lead in deaths caused by traffic accidents, which were previously handled by the agency’s violent crimes unit. Worrell said the new unit has already cleared its backlog from 2019, with Fear adding that he hopes to close unresolved 2020 cases by the end of the year.
“Unanimous decision: Palm Beach County, city approve plans for UF campus near downtown” via Wayne Washington and Hannah Morse of The Palm Beach Post — In back-to-back, unanimous votes, commissioners in Palm Beach County and West Palm Beach approved preliminary plans to have the University of Florida open a campus near downtown, a move supporters described as “historic” and “transformative.” County commissioners followed up with their own approval on Tuesday morning. UF President Kent Fuchs attended both meetings, praising the university’s expansion plan as an opportunity to offer graduate school offerings that will be taken by students who eventually start businesses and occupy high-level jobs brought to the area.
“‘We must always remember’: Holocaust Council to honor Steve Uhlfelder for education” via the Tallahassee Democrat — Uhlfelder, who has made a major impact on Holocaust education, will be honored with an education award at the Holocaust Education Resource Council Remembrance Dinner at 5:30 p.m. Nov. 10 at the FSU University Club. Uhlfelder helped establish the Holocaust Institute for teachers at Florida State University in 1995. He led the legislative efforts to create a Holocaust Memorial at the state Capitol. While at the Holland & Knight Law Firm, he helped create the National Holocaust Remembrance Project. This project awarded scholarships for students who were the winners of an essay contest, which was a life-changing experience for them.
— TOP OPINION —
“Texas shows us what post-democracy America would look like” via Dana Milbank of The Washington Post — Thanks to a series of actions by the Texas legislature and governor, we now see exactly what the Trumpified Republican Party wants: to take us to an America where women cannot get abortions, even in cases of rape and incest; an America where almost everybody can openly carry a gun in public, without license, without permit, without safety training and without fingerprinting; and an America where law-abiding Black and Latino citizens are disproportionately denied the right to vote. It is where the rest of America will go unless those targeted by these new laws, women, people of color and all small “d” democrats, rise up.
— OPINIONS —
“DeSantis snubbed $820 million in federal food aid and won’t say why” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — Nobody’s going to bed hungry tonight in the Governor’s mansion. Too bad that’s not the case across the state. Yet Ron DeSantis is apparently leaving up to $820 million in federal food assistance on the table, and he won’t explain why. Does he have a reason? Or is it just a really bad one? More than four months after Florida could have first applied for the aid, it remains unclear if state officials are seeking the money, which is enough to feed 2.1 million children in low-income homes. More than 80 advocacy groups, including the food bank Feeding Tampa Bay, signed on to the letter Monday calling on DeSantis to seek the money.
What Jeff Brandes is reading — “A state of ‘collapse’ in Florida’s prison system” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — Florida locks up too many prisoners and pays too few officers to watch them. This perilous situation has prompted the Department of Corrections to close three of its 50 major institutions so it can concentrate inmates and staff elsewhere. The agency should use the sensible expedient of early release for elderly, ailing or nonviolent inmates, but it can’t. Having abolished parole like 15 other states, Florida is one of six whose laws require even nonviolent offenders to serve at least 85% of their time despite good behavior. Sentences have grown longer, largely because of 108 mandatory minimums that tie judges’ hands. It’s the result of politicians who pander for votes by cracking down on crime without paying for it.
—GAMEDAY —
“AAC commissioner: UCF-Boise State game a prestige game that plays pivotal role in league’s playoff push” via Matt Murschel of the Orlando Sentinel — When UCF host Boise State at the Bounce House Thursday night, it not only represents a huge opportunity for the Knights but also the American Athletic Conference. The game is one of several nonconference showdowns the AAC hopes will provide the league with an early boost, particularly as it makes another push in the race for the College Football Playoff. “It’s a chance to make a statement,” said AAC commissioner Mike Aresco.
“How will UCF Head Coach Gus Malzahn call Thursday night’s game against Boise State?” via Brian Smith of Sports Illustrated — Malzahn has found different ways to run the football before coming to Orlando. Inside zone, option, and gap schemes have all been used to run the football. However, with Dillon Gabriel now running the show behind center, Coach Malzahn will be afforded a unique passer that’s very accurate, especially with the deep ball. Even with Gabriel, look for Coach Malzahn to attempt to establish the running game. It’s his mentality; it’s his bread and butter.
“Stopping the run will be ‘super important’ for Boise State against UCF” via B.J. Rains of The Blue Mountain Eagle — Weeks of preparation and hours of film study and game planning for Boise State’s defense heading into Thursday’s opener against UCF can be simplified into one main point: stop the run. Sure, there’s a lot more to it, but the Broncos know they’ll have a strong shot of leaving Orlando with a win if they are successful in stopping the run. “It’s super important,” nickelback Kekaula Kaniho said. “They do a lot of different formations and things to kind of get your eyes moving all over the place to run the ball downhill at you, so if we can settle down and focus on those things and stop the run, I think we’ll be in great shape.”
“Boise State preps for Florida humidity and UCF’s full Bounce House” via Jason Beede of the Orlando Sentinel — The high temperatures for tonight’s weather forecast in Boise, Idaho and Orlando read identical: 86 degrees. One key difference: the humidity. At Boise State, the estimated humidity will be around 25%, while at UCF, that number is expected to be more than three times higher at 88%, the forecast reads. That difference in humidity is something the Broncos have attempted to recreate throughout practice, Boise State head coach Andy Avalos explained Saturday.
“Why UCF-Boise State is the state’s most interesting Week 1 matchup” via Matt Baker of the Tampa Bay Times — Former Auburn coach Gus Malzahn will be making his Knights debut against the Broncos’ first-time head coach, Andy Avalos, in a matchup of two teams who could challenge for a spot in a prestigious New Year’s Six bowl game. The possibility of conference realignment adds another wrinkle. The Big 12 isn’t going to base its expansion decisions on one nonconference result, of course. But two potential Big 12 targets playing each other in a prime-time, weekend-opening game creates another selling point for both programs.
— ALOE —
“Saints-Packers season opener moved to TIAA Bank Field in Hurricane Ida aftermath” via John Reid of The Florida Times-Union — The New Orleans Saints were originally scheduled to play at the Superdome for their Sept. 12 opener. But due to the aftermath of Hurricane Ida, where power remains out, along with disrupted services like water and sewage in the New Orleans area that could extend several weeks to repair, the franchise has been conducting its operations in Dallas. With the Jaguars playing at Houston for their Sept. 12 opener, the New Orleans Saints confirmed Wednesday afternoon they have moved their season-opener against the Green Bay Packers to TIAA Bank Field on that day with a 4:25 p.m. kickoff scheduled.
“Expect ‘a celebration of Blackness’ with the return of the Orange Blossom Classic” via C. Isaiah Smalls II of the Miami Herald — Sen. Shevrin Jones didn’t even like football. So, imagine his surprise when a friend invited him to a Florida A&M football game. At some point during the contest, something switched inside the future FAMU alum; the score became irrelevant, the players an afterthought and the fans a family. “It’s a huge family reunion,” Jones said. “I wish everyone — Black, white, Indigenous, just everybody — had the opportunity to experience the culture of HBCUs [Historically Black Colleges and Universities] even if you did go to a [primarily white institution].” With the Orange Blossom Classic scheduled to make its triumphant return to South Florida during Labor Day weekend, expect more than just a normal football game.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Best wishes to Rep. Spencer Roach and Dr. Judithanne Scourfield McLauchlan.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Axios AM
Happy Thursday! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,197 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
New Israeli vaccine research strengthens the Biden administration’s case for recommending COVID boosters for most Americans beginning Sept. 20, Axios’ Caitlin Owens reports.
- Why it matters: It’s increasingly likely that later this fall, being “fully vaccinated” will mean getting a third shot if you had Pfizer or Moderna. Research about J&J is ongoing.
The Biden administration has unveiled plans to recommend boosters beginning Sept. 20 for most adults, pending regulatory approval.
- But the idea is controversial because so much of the world’s population hasn’t even gotten a first shot, and the data on the need for boosters is sparse.
New Israeli research suggests the benefits can kick in quickly. Epidemiologists fear the summer surge won’t be the last, and we’ll continue to face the virus through the fall and winter.
- The preprint study, released by Israeli researchers, found that adults who received a third Pfizer shot saw their risk of infection drop by 11-fold, and their risk of severe disease drop by more than 10-fold.
What we’re hearing: A senior administration official told Axios that the Israeli government recently briefed Biden’s COVID team on the data.
- “I never thought of vaccines as short-term. This changes that paradigm,” the official said. “I think … once everybody sees that data, … you’ll understand the sense of urgency we have.”
Graphic: “The Rachel Maddow Show,” MSNBC
A 5-4 Supreme Court ruling allows a Texas law that bans most abortions to remain in force.
- Just after midnight ET, the court voted 5-4 to deny an emergency appeal from abortion providers who sought to block enforcement of the law, which went into effect at midnight CT on Wednesday.
It’s the strictest law against abortion rights since the high court’s landmark Roe v. Wade decision in 1973, AP reports.
- The Texas law prohibits abortions once medical professionals can detect cardiac activity.
- That’s usually around six weeks — and before many women know they’re pregnant.
What we’re watching: The justices suggested that their order likely isn’t the last word, since other challenges can still be brought.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Fewer than 600 people have flown to space, and most of them have been white men. But with the rise of commercial spaceflight, that’s expected to change, Axios Space author Miriam Kramer writes.
- Instead of spaceflight being governed by the stringent health and physical requirements NASA and other space agencies use to select their astronauts, private companies have more freedom to allow different types of people to fly.
Two crewmembers flying to space with SpaceX’s Inspiration4 on Sept. 15 represent groups of people who have historically been marginalized when it comes to spaceflight.
- Sian Proctor is set to become the first Black female to serve as the pilot of a space capsule.
- When Hayley Arceneaux — a childhood cancer survivor — takes flight, she will become the first person with a prosthesis to travel to space. “I couldn’t have been a traditional NASA astronaut,” Arceneaux told Axios. “Astronauts have really had to be physically perfect.”
🎧 In our new podcast series, “The Next Astronauts,” Miriam Kramer and the Axios “How It Happened” team follow the first all-civilian crew of astronauts as they prepare for their Sept. 15 launch.
- Hear it here: Part II just dropped!
Photo: Anthony Behar/Sipa USA via Reuters
At least eight people are dead after remnants of Ida caused flash flooding in the New York City area, The New York Times reports.
The scene above is in Queens!
- The FDNY is rescuing a woman from her car after it stalled under waist-deep water.
Central Park recorded 3.15 inches of rain in one hour, from 8:51 p.m. to 9:51 p.m.
- Subway service is mostly suspended this morning.
Rainfall floods the basement of Kennedy’s Fried Chicken in the Bronx.
- The National Weather Service called it “an exceedingly rare event with 6-10″ of rainfall falling over a several hour period.”
At 9:43 p.m., the Weather Service in NYC tweeted: “[T]his particular warning for NYC is the second time we’ve ever issued a Flash Flood Emergency (It’s the first one for NYC). The first time we’ve issued a Flash Flood Emergency was for Northeast New Jersey an hour ago.”
- “We are seeing way too many reports of water rescues and stranded motorists,” the Weather Service tweeted. “Do not drive through flooded roadways. You do not know how deep the water is and it is too dangerous. Turn Around Don’t Drown.”
COVID infections continue to climb all across the U.S., with few new solutions on the horizon, Axios’ Sam Baker writes.
- There are some initial signs that things may be starting to get better in the South, which has experienced the worst of this wave.
About 160,000 Americans now test positive for COVID-19 each day — a 14% increase, nationwide, over the past two weeks.
- A small handful of hotspots — Florida, Louisiana and Missouri — have begun to improve over the past two weeks, although cases are still rising in 44 states.
- The biggest increases remain clustered largely in the Southeast, along with Indiana, West Virginia and South Dakota.
COVID hospitalizations are beginning to tick down, largely due to improvements in the South, Bloomberg reports.
Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photo: Office of Management and Budget
Mina Hsiang will lead the U.S. Digital Service, the Office of Management and Budget told Axios’ Margaret Harding McGill, as the Biden administration beefs up its cadre of technological special forces tasked with solving problems across the federal government.
- Why it matters: Washington is preparing to spend trillions in infrastructure money, including funds for digital systems.
Hsiang will be the first woman and first Asian American to be the administrator of USDS, which was launched in 2014 in the aftermath of the troubled rollout of the HealthCare.gov website.
- Hsiang worked on the Obama administration’s HealthCare.gov rescue. She helped the Biden administration launch Vaccines.gov.
Photo: Powered by People
Beto O’Rourke today launches a voter registration tool allowing eligible Texans to register at home with volunteers deployed on request, Axios’ Stef Kight reports.
- Why it matters: The announcement comes two days after the Republican-controlled Texas legislature passed a bill that voting-rights activists say will make it more difficult for some Texans to vote.
The program is being launched in 10 counties by Powered by People, which O’Rourke founded. Other counties will be added.
The FTC is probing why McDonald’s McFlurry ice-cream machines are constantly broken — and a massive pain for franchisees to repair, The Wall Street Journal scoops (subscription).
- The machines are out of order so often that they’ve become the years-long butt of late-night jokes. Conspiracy theories are bandied about.
- “The FTC wants to know how McDonald’s reviews suppliers and equipment, … and how often restaurant owners are allowed to work on their own machines.”
Why it matters: “The Biden administration is scrutinizing a range of products, from phones to tractors, on whether manufacturers impede owners from fixing the products themselves,” The Journal notes.
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Dog’s killing by husband of village president leads to calls for justice in suburb
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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: SCOTUS ruling puts Roe v. Wade on the ropes
DRIVING THE DAY
BREAKING OVERNIGHT: The Supreme Court, by 5 to 4, declined to block Texas’s law banning abortions after six weeks — a strong but not final indication that the court will soon overturn Roe v. Wade … Conservative majority cites “complex,” “novel” legal technicalities and insists constitutionality can still be reviewed later on … Chief Justice JOHN ROBERTS and the court’s three liberals write outraged dissents describing the law as clearly unconstitutional and blasting the majority for shirking their duty. … The ruling, per AP, “for now [strips] most women of the right to an abortion in the nation’s second-largest state.”
What you’ll hear today from abortion rights supporters, via former acting Solicitor General NEAL KATYAL (@Neal Katyal): “Congress should tmrw pass legislation to codify Roe. SCOTUS powerless to stop it. If [Republicans] filibuster, great [argument] to get rid of it.”
Josh Gerstein, POLITICO’s senior legal affairs reporter, emails overnight with his analysis:
The 5-4 decision that came down just before midnight Wednesday was not far from what many courtwatchers expected after the deadline for the law to go into force came and went Tuesday night without any announcement from the justices. However, the ruling was notable for a few things:
— The court’s majority acknowledged that the Texas law may well be unconstitutional, saying the law’s opponents had “raised serious questions” about its impact on abortion rights that — for now — remain guaranteed under existing law by Roe v. Wade.
— Roberts, who has parted company with his conservative colleagues in a series of high-profile cases, did so again over the Texas law and sided with the liberals in declaring that the court should have prevented the novel anti-abortion measure from taking effect.
— All four of the dissenting justices authored dissents, a highly unusual move for a case on the court’s emergency or “shadow” docket. The fusillade of opinions seemed intended to signal a degree of outrage from the dissenters over the court’s move.
— Roberts’ opinion was a bit more tepid than those from some of the court’s Democratic appointees. As usual, the most passionate opinion came from Justice SONIA SOTOMAYOR, who called the majority’s decision “stunning,” the law “a breathtaking act of defiance,” and the situation it has engendered “untenable.”
The ruling is unlikely to be the last word from the court on the Texas law. While abortion rights supporters think they have little chance of persuading Justices CLARENCE THOMAS, SAMUEL ALITO or NEIL GORSUCH to act against the legislation, they still hope that either Justice BRETT KAVANAUGH or Justice AMY CONEY BARRETT might side with the law’s opponents if the issue gets before them in a different legal vehicle.
The majority’s opinion (Alito, Thomas, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, Barrett): “The applicants now before us have raised serious questions regarding the constitutionality of the Texas law at issue. But their application also presents complex and novel antecedent procedural questions on which they have not carried their burden. … In reaching this conclusion, we stress that we do not purport to resolve definitively any jurisdictional or substantive claim in the applicants’ lawsuit. In particular, this order is not based on any conclusion about the constitutionality of Texas’s law, and in no way limits other procedurally proper challenges to the Texas law, including in Texas state courts.”
Roberts’ dissent: “The statutory scheme before the Court is not only unusual, but unprecedented. The legislature has imposed a prohibition on abortions after roughly six weeks, and then essentially delegated enforcement of that prohibition to the populace at large. The desired consequence appears to be to insulate the State from responsibility for implementing and enforcing the regulatory regime. …
“[A]lthough the Court does not address the constitutionality of this law, it can of course promptly do so when that question is properly presented.”
Breyer’s dissent: “I recognize that Texas’s law delegates the State’s power to prevent abortions not to one person (such as a district attorney) or to a few persons (such as a group of government officials or private citizens) but to any person. But I do not see why that fact should make a critical legal difference. That delegation still threatens to invade a constitutional right, and the coming into effect of that delegation still threatens imminent harm.”
Sotomayor’s dissent: “The Court’s order is stunning. Presented with an application to enjoin a flagrantly unconstitutional law engineered to prohibit women from exercising their constitutional rights and evade judicial scrutiny, a majority of Justices have opted to bury their heads in the sand. Last night, the Court silently acquiesced in a State’s enactment of a law that flouts nearly 50 years of federal precedents. Today, the Court belatedly explains that it declined to grant relief because of procedural complexities of the State’s own invention. … Because the Court’s failure to act rewards tactics designed to avoid judicial review and inflicts significant harm on the applicants and on women seeking abortions in Texas, I dissent. …
Kagan’s dissent: “Without full briefing or argument, and after less than 72 hours’ thought, this Court greenlights the operation of Texas’s patently unconstitutional law banning most abortions. The Court thus rewards Texas’s scheme to insulate its law from judicial review by deputizing private parties to carry out unconstitutional restrictions on the State’s behalf. As of last night, and because of this Court’s ruling, Texas law prohibits abortions for the vast majority of women who seek them—in clear, and indeed undisputed, conflict with Roe and Casey.”
NYT: “[T]he ruling was certain to fuel the hopes of abortion opponents and fears of abortion rights advocates as the court takes up a separate case in its new term this fall to decide whether Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 decision establishing a constitutional right to the procedure, should be overruled. It also left Texas abortion providers turning away patients as they scrambled to comply with the law, which prohibits abortions after roughly six weeks.”
WaPo: ‘“We are devastated that the Supreme Court has refused to block a law that blatantly violates Roe v. Wade,’ said NANCY NORTHUP, president and chief executive of the Center for Reproductive Rights, one of the groups suing Texas. … Longtime abortion opponents claimed Wednesday as ‘a historic and hopeful day’ in Texas, and some began soliciting tips on who might violate the ban.”
— The next critical moment will arrive this fall, when SCOTUS takes up Mississippi’s 15-week abortion ban in a case, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which is expected to decide the fate of Roe. A ruling would likely come next year.
Of course, there are real-life implications playing out in Texas right now. Per WaPo, about nine of 10 women “who obtain abortions in Texas are at least six weeks into pregnancy, meaning the law would prohibit nearly all abortions in the state.”
Our health care reporter Alice Miranda Ollstein, who has covered abortion issues for years, tweeted Wednesday that three things are already starting to occur:
1) Other red states are weighing copycat laws.
2) Anti-abortion groups are soliciting anonymous tips about women getting abortions past the ban deadline, and getting flooded with fake ones from protesters.
3) And clinics that do such procedures are seeing more surveillance of who’s coming and going.
The political implications: “Abortion becomes a ‘huge motivator’ in governor’s races,” by Zach Montellaro
And the NYT has a useful Q&A on the Texas law — and its novel enforcement mechanism — here.
Good Thursday morning, and thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
Three must-reads today from our POLITICO colleagues:
1) Jennifer Scholtes, Heather Caygle and Caitlin Emma break down the state of play on assembling the reconciliation bill: “Speaker NANCY PELOSI has ordered committee leaders to battle it out with their Senate counterparts to resolve all major disputes this week on what will be included in the up-to-$3.5 trillion bill. But wide gulfs remain between the House and Senate on central pieces of the package, including expanding Medicare, shoring up Obamacare, raising taxes and curbing carbon emissions.”
2) David Siders, with a fancy Round Rock, Texas, dateline, tells you everything you need to know about BETO O’ROURKE’s return to politics (did he ever really leave?): “In Texas, the Democrats’ hope for the governorship, or a Senate seat, rests on the shoulders of Beto O’Rourke. But does he even have a shot?”
3) Ben Weyl interviews GOP lobbyist LIAM DONOVAN, one of our favorite Twitter follows, who has some savvy advice for Democrats about how they can avoid screwing up President JOE BIDEN’s agenda.
BIDEN’S THURSDAY:
— 9:30 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 11:30 a.m.: Biden will deliver remarks about the Hurricane Ida response.
— 1:45 p.m.: Biden will take part in a virtual event with rabbis nationwide for the Jewish High Holidays.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 1 p.m. The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 3 p.m.
VP KAMALA HARRIS’ THURSDAY:
— 3 p.m.: The VP will swear in KEN SALAZAR as U.S. ambassador to Mexico.
— 4:25 p.m.: Harris will meet with Labor Secretary MARTY WALSH and staff on the White House Task Force on Worker Organizing and Empowerment.
THE SENATE and THE HOUSE are out.
NEW ON THE SCHEDULE: Biden will travel to New Orleans on Friday to survey the impact of Hurricane Ida and meet with state and local leaders.
PLAYBOOK READS
CONGRESS
WHAT BERNIE SANDERS IS READING — “White House seeks to speed potential Medicare dental expansion in face of expected delays,” by WaPo’s Jeff Stein and Rachel Roubein: “[O]fficials with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services have said it could take in the range of three to five years to implement new dental benefits … The lengthy timeline threatens to diminish the political upside of the new benefits, which Democrats have seen as an immediate and tangible improvement in voters’ lives they could present to the public in the 2022 and 2024 elections. …
“The White House, Congressional Democrats, and officials with the Department of Health and Human Services are currently working to see what they could do to expedite implementation of the dental care … Democrats intend to provide a benefit that offers seniors financial assistance next year for dental, vision and hearing care while the formal benefits are set up. One option may involve working with private dental companies with access to better data … Another option could involve a temporary stopgap measure.”
DEMS BUCK BIDEN — “House panel backs $24B Pentagon budget boost, defying Biden,” by Connor O’Brien and Paul McLeary: “The committee voted to boost the budget topline of the annual National Defense Authorization Act in a 42-17 vote during its marathon markup of the military policy legislation. … Fourteen Democrats broke ranks to push the GOP budget proposal over the finish line.”
TALIBAN TAKEOVER
FOR YOUR RADAR — “Cotton leads Senate GOP push on Biden’s Afghanistan withdrawal,” by Burgess Everett: “Senate Republicans are pressing President Joe Biden to account for how many Americans, green card holders and special immigrant visa applicants remain in Afghanistan after the U.S. completed its withdrawal earlier this week.
“Led by Sen. TOM COTTON (R-Ark.), a group of 26 Republicans wrote Biden on Thursday morning requesting information by next week about who remains in Afghanistan after the frenzied evacuation effort at the end of August. … The Republicans’ letter on Thursday centers on how many Americans are still in Afghanistan and how many of those want to leave. In addition, the GOP senators asked similar questions about green card holders and special immigrant visa applicants who assisted U.S. operations in Afghanistan.”
WaPo: “For Afghan evacuees arriving to U.S., a tenuous legal status and little financial support”
NYT: “Pentagon Leaders Wary of Working With Taliban”
POLITICO: “Hundreds of U.S. citizens, Afghan commandos, successfully evacuated through secret CIA base”
ANOTHER MAJOR LEAK — “Exclusive: Before Afghan collapse, Biden pressed Ghani to ‘change perception,’” by Reuters’ Aram Roston and Nandita Bose: “In much of the [July 23] call, Biden focused on what he called the Afghan government’s ‘perception’ problem. ‘I need not tell you the perception around the world and in parts of Afghanistan, I believe, is that things are not going well in terms of the fight against the Taliban,’ Biden said. ‘And there is a need, whether it is true or not, there is a need to project a different picture.’”
THE EVACUEES — “U.S. housing 17,000 Afghan evacuees in 5 states, with another 40,000 overseas,” by CBS’ Camilo Montoya Galvez, Bo Erickson, Christina Ruffini and Eleanor Watson: “These figures, which have not been previously reported, provide more detail on the whereabouts of a portion of the approximately 124,000 people the Biden administration said it airlifted from Kabul in the past few weeks.”
THOSE WE LEFT BEHIND — “Majority of Interpreters, Other U.S. Visa Applicants Were Left Behind in Afghanistan, Official Says,” by WSJ’s Jessica Donati: “The U.S. still doesn’t have reliable data on who was evacuated, nor for what type of visas they may qualify, the official said, but initial assessments suggested most visa applicants didn’t make it through the crush at the airport. ‘I would say it’s the majority of them,’ the official estimated. ‘Just based on anecdotal information about the populations we were able to support.’”
POLICY CORNER
DOJ VS. GOOGLE — “U.S. DOJ Readying Google Antitrust Lawsuit Over Ad-Tech Business,” by Bloomberg’s David McLaughlin
WHAT MARCIA FUDGE IS UP TO — “White House tackles housing shortage with plan for 100,000 affordable homes,” Reuters: “The moves will focus on boosting home sales to individuals and non-profit organizations, while limiting sales to large investors … U.S. President Joe Biden has proposed spending over $300 billion to add 2 million more affordable housing units as part of a $3.5 trillion investment package being considered by Congress, but wanted to push forward with immediate steps that could be taken now.”
— “The Secret Bias Hidden in Mortgage-Approval Algorithms,” a special report co-published by The Markup and AP
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
OUTRAGE AND PARANOIA IN GEORGIA — “The election gambit that’s sending Georgia Democrats into a frenzy,” by Maya King: “Georgia Republicans say it’s merely an attempt to improve a chronically mismanaged elections administration. But a newly-formed election review panel in Atlanta’s Fulton County is nevertheless sparking outrage — and paranoia — from Democrats who believe it’s the GOP’s first step toward commandeering the levers of election administration in the counties that powered Democratic gains last year.
“The belief is not entirely unfounded. … In the GOP’s action in Fulton County, Democrats see the makings of a grand design to take control of local election offices in the metro Atlanta region, which would give Republicans the power to challenge election results, hold up certification and announce investigations in the counties that produce the most Democratic votes. In other words, it would enable them to execute the pieces of the Trump playbook that failed in 2020.”
REPUBLICANS REINVENTED — “Tea party 2.0? Conservatives get organized in school battles,” AP’s Thomas Beaumont and Stephen Groves: “A loose network of conservative groups with ties to major Republican donors and party-aligned think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in culture war fights in schools across the country. While they are drawn by the anger of parents opposed to school policies on racial history or COVID-19 protocols like mask mandates, the groups are often run by political operatives and lawyers standing ready to amplify local disputes.
“This growing support network highlights the energy and resources being poured into the cauldron of political debate in the nation’s schools. Republicans hope the efforts lay the groundwork for a comeback in congressional elections next year. Some see the burst of local organizing on the right as reminiscent of a movement that helped power the GOP takeover of the House 10 years ago.”
TRUMP CARDS
WITH A VENGEANCE — “Trump endorses Joe Kent, Republican challenger to Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, who voted for impeachment,” by Seattle Times’ Jim Brunner: “Following up on vows to exact revenge against Republicans who voted to impeach him, Trump on Wednesday endorsed JOE KENT, a challenger to U.S. Rep. JAIME HERRERA BEUTLER. Herrera Beutler, R-Battle Ground, was one of 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump in January, citing the former president’s role in inciting the Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol by promoting baseless claims of election fraud.”
— “Trump endorses Parnell in Pennsylvania Senate race,” by Pittsburgh Post-Gazette’s Julian Routh: “Mr. Trump’s endorsement was seen as a potential game-changer among Republican insiders, as the former president continues to be popular among GOP voters. But some analysts had urged Republican candidates to be careful with how close they align with Mr. Trump if they want to win a general election in a state that Democrat Joe Biden carried in 2020.”
HAPPENING THIS WEEK — ”Trump Organization Employees to Testify Before Manhattan Grand Jury,” by WSJ’s Rebecca Ballhaus and Corinne Ramey
JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH
COMING LATER THIS MONTH … “Intel shows extremists to attend Capitol rally,” by AP’s Michael Balsamo, Eric Tucker and Lisa Mascaro: “Far right extremist groups like the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers are planning to attend a rally later this month at the U.S. Capitol that is designed to demand ‘justice’ for the hundreds of people who have been charged in connection with January’s insurrection, according to three people familiar with intelligence gathered by federal officials.
“As a result, U.S. Capitol Police have been discussing in recent weeks whether the large perimeter fence that was erected outside the Capitol after January’s riot will need to be put back up, the people said. The officials have been discussing security plans that involve reconstructing the fence as well as another plan that does not involve a fence, the people said.”
PLAYBOOKERS
Rudy Giuliani recorded a Cameo video praising a group of journalist and activist critics of one of his clients, leading N.Y. Mag’s Olivia Nuzzi, who obtained the video, to compare him to the “fourth Stooge.”
Joe Rogan has Covid-19 and says on Instagram that he’s attacked it with a cocktail of monoclonal antibodies, Z-Pak, prednisone and the horse dewormer ivermectin (natch).
Rosie O’Donnell will interview fellow 9/11 truthers whom Spike Lee cut from his forthcoming HBO documentary.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) released a statement calling on the Senate to reject Rahm Emanuel’s nomination to be the U.S. ambassador to Japan.
Devin O’Malley, a spokesman for GOP gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin, reportedly called into the show of right-wing radio host Seb Gorka and pretended to be a Youngkin supporter named Josh. (The clip is hilarious.)
Julie Pace was named the top editor at the AP. She was previously the AP’s bureau chief in Washington, where she has worked to shake off the venerable newswire’s reputation for staid no-frills coverage.
“I understand that sometimes there is an outdated impression of the AP or a feeling like we’re just a basic wire service putting out choppy sentences,” she told the NYT. “If that is your impression of the AP, then you haven’t been paying attention to the AP. We produce just incredibly high-level, sophisticated reports across all formats every day.”
Doug Heye got really mad at United Airlines.
SPOTTED: Terry McAuliffe at the Eagles concert at Capital One Arena on Tuesday. Pic
MEDIA MOVES — Bloomberg is adding Stacy-Marie Ishmael as managing editor for crypto, Anna Wong as chief U.S. economist and Adrian Wooldridge as global business columnist. Ishmael most recently was editorial director of the Texas Tribune. Wong most recently was a principal economist at the Federal Reserve Board. Wooldridge most recently was political editor and the person behind the Bagehot column at The Economist.
BOOK NEWS — “Raskin writing memoir about Jan. 6, son’s suicide,” by The Hill’s Scott Wong: “In ‘Unthinkable: Trauma, Truth, and the Trials of American Democracy,’ [Rep. Jamie] Raskin opens up about losing his 25-year-old son Tommy to suicide on New Year’s Eve, defending the results of the 2020 election on the House floor on Jan. 6, surviving the deadly Capitol insurrection with his daughter and son-in-law, drafting two articles of impeachment against Trump for his role in the riot and leading the Democrats’ ultimately unsuccessful prosecution of the 45th president in his second Senate impeachment trial.
“It will be published by Harper, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, on Jan. 4, just two days before the first anniversary of the Capitol insurrection.”
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Sophia Sokolowski is now director of intergovernmental affairs for the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative. She most recently was a consultant for the Freedom Initiative and is an inaugural committee and Biden campaign alum.
STAFFING UP — The Interior Department is adding Jordan Chatman as senior advance representative, Sarah Greenberger as associate deputy secretary, Rebecca Kasper as adviser in the Office of Congressional and Legislative Affairs, Keone Nakoa as deputy assistant secretary for insular and international affairs and Summer Sylva as senior adviser for Native Hawaiian affairs. Announcement
TRANSITIONS — Farah Melendez will manage Nikki Fried’s Florida gubernatorial campaign. She most recently has managed Virginia A.G. Mark Herring’s reelect and worked as national political director for the Democratic Attorneys General Association. More from Florida Politics … Dan Henke is now director of U.S. government relations at the ONE Campaign. He’s a USAID, Monument Advocacy and Pat Roberts alum. …
… Rachel Ver Velde is leaving Rep. Glenn Grothman’s (R-Wis.) office, where she was chief of staff, to become director of workforce, education and employment policy at Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce. Alan Ott will move up to become a district-based chief of staff, and Tim Svoboda will move up to lead the D.C. office.
TRUMP ALUMNI — Hannah Anderson is now a senior associate for FP1 Strategies. She previously was scheduler for Rep. Carlos Gimenez (R-Fla.) and is a Trump campaign alum.
BIRTHWEEK (was Wednesday): RNC’s Lindsay Wigo (23)
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. John Rutherford (R-Fla.) … Lisa Barclay … NPR’s Don Gonyea … Sinclair’s James Rosen … Jess Fassler … former Sens. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) (7-0) and Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.) (9-0) … J.P. Freire … former Rep. Earl Pomeroy (D-N.D.) … Zakiya Thomas … Yahoo News’ Dan Klaidman … Taylor Hennings … Tom Manatos of Spotify … Coleman Hutchins … Bill Bode of Sen. Thom Tillis’ (R-N.C.) office … Kris Balderston … Emily Porter of Sidecar Health … Joe Shonkwiler … PBS’ Raney Aronson-Rath … Bully Pulpit Interactive’s Bryan Watt … Seth Gainer of Sen. Joe Manchin’s (D-W.Va.) office … Will Attig … Evan Viau of the House Energy and Commerce Committee … Victoria Bonney of Rep. Chellie Pingree’s (D-Maine) office … Axiom Strategies’ Ethan Zorfas … Dylan Vorbach … AHIP’s Andrew Shine … Jennifer Hanley … Chester Bedell of Data Trust … Wyss Foundation’s Molly McUsic … Kevin Smith … POLITICO Europe’s Laura Greenhalgh … Elizabeth Birch of CBRE … TMZ’s Harvey Levin
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Democrats Angry That Babies and Votes Are Now Safer in Texas
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Alien vs Predator is still my favorite rom-com.
I find myself asking “What would Richard Pryor do?” a lot these days.
Every time I do, my liver tells me to stop being so curious.
The incessant flow of terrible news about the incompetence of the addled occupier of the Oval Office doesn’t look like it’s going to let up any time soon. At times it seems as if Team Biden has outlawed good news.
This morning I am happy to report that they haven’t. Or if they have, it hasn’t been successful.
There were a couple of stories out of Texas on Wednesday that made a little bit of sunshine peek back through all of the dark clouds that we’ve had to endure as a nation, all in the effort to avoid being exposed to mean tweets.
The first had to do with the ongoing effort by decent Americans to ensure that our elections don’t continue devolving into a meaningless facade for one-party, dictatorial rule. Texas became the latest state in this still great land to shore up some of the pandemic-induced erosion of election integrity.
Rick had the story and some good snark to go with it:
Did you know that the world ended yesterday? Kind of snuck up on ya, didn’t it? It seems that evil Republicans are conspiring to deny the right to vote to women and minorities in Texas by passing a law that has the temerity to suggest that no one should be allowed to vote who isn’t who they say they are.
Imagine that! The gall! Why don’t those evil Republicans just trust everyone who shows up to vote to be who they say they are? It’s unAmerican!
Besides, the idea that anyone in America wants to try and steal an election in this day and age is crazy, right?
At any rate, after Republicans passed the new voting integrity law, the ground opened up, the dead began to walk, fire and brimstone fell from the sky — you know the rest. Positively biblical, if you listen to the left. We’re doomed.
Naturally, the guardians of American democracy — or, at least, their version of it — are upset.
Every time a state attempts to scale back some of the madness that was allowed to occur last year the libs head for the fainting couches, screaming about “barriers” and “restrictions” at the top of their lungs all the way. The Democrats’ ongoing dishonesty about voting laws is a particular pet peeve of mine:
The Wall Street Journal provided some facts and perspective on the new Texas law:
The Democrats who fled Texas in July to block their Legislature’s voting bill eventually had to go home. On Tuesday the bill passed, and Gov. Greg Abbott says he’ll sign it. Cue the shouts of “voter suppression,” as Democrats push H.R.4, Congress’s latest plan to federalize U.S. elections.
The Texas bill isn’t a blockade of the ballot box. The two most-cited provisions will ban 24-hour voting and drive-through voting, practices that weren’t even used until last year, when one county tried them in a pandemic. It isn’t crazy to think polling sites are likelier to attract trouble, or at least suspicion, at 3 a.m.
In one more state, the fraud-fest has been taken down a notch. Now we need to get to work on the vote-by-mail evil.
The other positive news from Texas had to do with the state’s new abortion law that just went into effect, which I wrote about last night:
The Supreme Court has allowed a new Texas law that greatly shrinks the window for legal abortions to stand…for now.
CNN:
The Supreme Court formally denied a request from Texas abortion providers to freeze a state law that bars abortions after six weeks. Chief Justice John Roberts joined the three liberal justices in dissent.
The court’s move means that the law — which is one of the strictest in the nation and bans abortion before many people know they are pregnant — will remain on the books.
The law allows private citizens to bring civil suits against anyone who assists a pregnant person seeking an abortion in violation of the ban.
In an unsigned opinion, the majority wrote that while the clinics had raised “serious questions regarding the constitutionality of the Texas law,” they had not met a burden that would allow the court to block it at this time due to “complex” and “novel” procedural questions.
All that happened is that the law is allowed to remain in effect for now. Because hysteria is their default mode, Democrats and their flying monkeys in the media were rending their garments about the end of times. There will be plenty more challenges to the law and abortion is sadly still legal everywhere.
This was, however, a step in the right direction on an issue where we have a lot more work to do.
We didn’t exactly all win the lottery, but we did finally have one news cycle that had a couple of stories we could cheer for.
Let’s see if we can do it again.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
Me: Trump Effect: Newsom Nervous About Latino Vote in Recall
Thanks, Joe: 32 California Students Trapped In Afghanistan
VodkaPundit: Congressman Markwayne Mullin Has Gone Missing From Afghanistan… Or Has He?
‘Horrified’ and ‘Appalled’ Biden Admin Staff Shocked He Left Americans Stranded in Afghanistan
Gavin Newsom Is Under Fire. Literally.
#MeToo: SCOTUS Lets Texas Abortion Law Stand, Roberts Sides With Libs AGAIN
Bad News for the Dems: Kamala Harris Is an Unpopular Liability Who Vanishes at Important Times
Illinois School Will Reevaluate ‘Gag Order’ Barring Parents From Recording Zoom Classes
Arizona: Muslim Family Tries to Kidnap Woman With Non-Muslim Boyfriend for Honor Killing
VDH: There’s a Problem in the Upper Reaches of Our Military
Nigel Farage Rips Biden: ‘We Cannot Trust America With This Man in Charge’
Fire ’em all. Did Gen. Mark Milley Lie to Congress?
My appetite is better already. No Soup for You! Biden Supporters Not Welcome at Florida Diner
Republicans in Texas Pass Voting Integrity Bill. New York Times Hardest Hit.
Here We Go Again: Investigation Finds 82k ‘Lost Votes’ in Wisconsin
Check Out What the Biden Administration Just Did to Websites Listing Weapons It Gave to the Taliban
Lebanon’s People Finally Begin to Rebel Against Hezbollah Tyranny
Washington Post Knows What Will Make America Great Again: Afghan Refugees
Taking the Commie Out of the Military: Republicans Move to Ban CRT in Armed Forces
Wendy Davis Is Back. Now She’s Suing a Texas Veteran and Trump Supporter
Geostrategist: Biden’s Afghanistan ‘Fiasco’ Is a ‘Disaster’ for Asia
Reports: Taliban Engaged in House-to-House Executions
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: This Guy Is Senile and Can the Media Stop Pretending He’s Not?
MORE OF THIS. Colorado High School Students Stage Walkout To Protest Mask Mandate
Mitch McConnell Has Weighed in on Whether to Impeach Joe Biden
Pollster: Virginia Statewide Races Have the ‘Making of a Perfect Storm for Republicans’
WATCH: Parents Light Up Natomas CA School Board Over Pro-Antifa Teacher
Dan Crenshaw’s Office Good and Fully Wrecks CNN’s Biden Simping ‘Fact-Checker’
Gun Control Activists Target Concealed Carry Ahead of SCOTUS Case
Cam&Co. Texas Gun Store Owner Weighs In On Constitutional Carry
Could California Gun Control Be Coming To An Abrupt Halt?
Taiwan’s Defense Ministry warns China could ‘paralyze’ its defenses
Portland journalist who was attacked by Antifa: ‘The hypocrisy is palpable’
VIP
Kruiser’s ‘Worst Week Ever’—Enough With the Dems’ Nonsense About an ‘Inclusive’ Taliban Already
Austin Soccer Fans and the Club Deliver a Stirring and Patriotic National Anthem
Joe Biden Is Trying to Have it Both Ways on Afghanistan
Joe Biden Needs to Stop Using His Late Son to Avoid Criticism
GOLD I Cannot Handle All the Not Winning
GOLD DC Outsider Ep. 12: A Story About a Guy at Hardee’s
Around the Interwebz
Canada’s slide towards corona authoritarianism
FAA investigating off-course descent of Virgin Galactic’s flight with Richard Branson
Bill tells NC hospitals to let in clergy during emergency
Koalas Have Fingerprints That Are Nearly Indistinguishable From Ours
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
My Bed, Bath, and Beyond coupons seem to be breeding.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: SCOTUS Lets Texas Heartbeat Law Take Effect
Chief Justice John Roberts and each of the court’s three Democrat-appointed justices dissented.
The Dispatch Staff | 3 |
Happy Thursday! Finally! It’s about time the Federal Trade Commission looked into … why McDonalds’ McFlurry machines are always broken?
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- Shortly before midnight last night, the Supreme Court issued a brief statement saying it would not block Texas’s new abortion law from going into effect while legal challenges against it work through the courts. The unsigned opinion was the work of five of the Court’s six GOP-appointed justices; Chief Justice John Roberts and the three Democrat-appointed justices each penned their own dissent.
- State Department spokesman Ned Price said on Wednesday that nearly 24,000 “Afghans at risk” have arrived in the United States since the outset of the Kabul airlift, defining that group to include Special Immigrant Visa applicants, P-1/P-2 referrals, and “perhaps others as well.” A senior State Department official, however, told multiple news outlets yesterday that the Biden administration believes it left behind “the majority” of Afghan interpreters and allies who applied for visas in an effort to escape the Taliban.
- The Biden administration has struggled in recent days to clarify how it views the United States’ relationship with the Taliban going forward. White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain said Tuesday he didn’t “know if we will ever recognize [the Taliban’s] government,” while Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters in a press briefing that “it’s possible” the U.S. will work with the Taliban to fight ISIS-K. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin jumped in shortly after Milley’s remarks to say he “would not want to make any predictions.”
- The Navy said on Wednesday that five helicopter crew members are missing and five sailors aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln are injured after an MH-60S helicopter crashed into the Pacific Ocean 60 nautical miles off the San Diego coast Tuesday. An additional sailor aboard the helicopter was rescued and is in stable condition.
- A Colorado grand jury on Wednesday indicted three police officers and two paramedics on charges of manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide for their role in the August 2019 death of 23-year-old Elijah McClain. Despite having committed no crime—police approached him after receiving a report that he looked suspicious—McClain was placed in a carotid control hold, rendered unconscious, and injected with 500 milligrams of ketamine, according to the indictment.
- Four Dallas Fire Department employees have had their paramedic licenses placed on probation after a state investigation into three separate incidents, including the death of Tony Timpa. The 32-year-old Timpa died in August 2016 after calling 911 while suffering a schizophrenic episode; body camera footage shows officers kneeling on Timpa’s back for 14 minutes and first responders waiting at least four minutes after Timpa became unresponsive to begin CPR.
- About 1 million Louisiana households remained without power as of Wednesday night in the wake of Hurricane Ida. Dozens of people have been hospitalized with carbon monoxide poisoning due to improperly operated generators.
SCOTUS Declines to Stay Texas Abortion Law
When the sun came up yesterday, it rose on a country that had just seen its most radical change to state abortion policy in decades. Back in May, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott had signed a sweeping new anti-abortion bill into law, banning abortions when a fetal heartbeat can be detected (generally from about the sixth week of pregnancy) except in cases of medical emergency. A coalition of abortion providers had petitioned the Supreme Court to block its implementation this week, arguing it would “immediately and catastrophically reduce abortion access in Texas.” But as the Tuesday deadline came and went, the court did not respond. The law went into effect Wednesday morning after midnight.
Exactly one day later, just before midnight last night, the court broke its silence. The providers who sued had “raised serious questions regarding the constitutionality of the Texas law at issue,” a majority of the court wrote. But “their application also presents complex and novel antecedent procedural questions on which they have not carried their burden.” The opinion did not endorse the constitutionality of Texas’s law, but decreed that, pending a final judicial judgment, it would be permitted to stand.
The unsigned opinion was the work of five of the court’s six Republican-appointed justices; the three Democratic appointees and Chief Justice John Roberts each penned their own dissents.
“The Court’s order is stunning,” wrote Justice Sonia Sotomayor. “Presented with an application to enjoin a flagrantly unconstitutional law engineered to prohibit women from exercising their constitutional rights and evade judicial scrutiny, a majority of Justices have opted to bury their heads in the sand.”
Roberts said he would have granted a temporary stay because “the statutory scheme before the Court is not only unusual, but unprecedented.”
Whether it will last remains to be seen. For liberals waking up to the news Wednesday, the takeaway seemed obvious: Here was a state law identical in effect to numerous similar “heartbeat laws” that had been summarily struck down in the past, and here was the new conservative-majority court blithely standing by as it went into effect. The Supreme Court might as well have put up a billboard forecasting its intent to overturn Roe v. Wade outside the courthouse.
Pro-life advocates certainly hope that’s the endgame here (or for one of a number of other legal challenges to Roe currently wending their way through the courts). But experts say the court’s inaction Tuesday may have had less to do with latent Roe hostility at SCOTUS than with the particular construction of Texas’s new law.
Worth Your Time
- A February 2021 Gallup poll found that more Americans than ever were frustrated with the two-party system and seeking a third option, but political scientist Alexander Cohen tries to dampen expectations that one will arise in this essay for Persuasion. “The dynamics of the American political system are stacked against the emergence of viable third parties, and no such party would have any real power,” he writes. “It’s true that some third parties have historically broken the mold, notably in the pre-Civil War era. The Republican Party itself began as an insurgent, anti-slavery third party. But the rules have changed. The Republican and Democratic parties have been in power so long that they have consciously designed a system that protects their dominance and discourages the organization of new third parties.”
- We weren’t sure whether to put this in “Worth Your Time” or “Toeing the Company Line,” but David joined Jane Coaston and Elizabeth Bruenig on “The Argument” podcast this week to discuss the ethics of the death penalty. “David and Liz … occupy different sides of the death penalty debate, and have each spent years thinking about the morality of this punishment,” Coaston says to kick off the conversation. “They both approach the death penalty from a religious standpoint, but even if you’re not religious or spiritual, I think you’ll still find our conversation thought-provoking.”
- For the New York Times, Dan Brooks writes about our increasingly videotaped existence—and the impact it’s having on today’s youth. “In the same way that the invention of the cellphone created the loud call in a restaurant, the smartphone has made public videography a mild but pervasive nuisance. We are still the protagonists of our own lives, but we are also now at risk of becoming supporting characters in other people’s Instagram stories,” he writes. “As a middle-aged man, I think of such technology as belonging to the kids, but it doesn’t. Smartphones, YouTube, TikTok and the like were brought to market by adults and then inflicted on a generation that has had little choice in the matter. Internet video belongs to Zoomers the way heroin belongs to junkies.”
Presented Without Comment
NEW: America has wasted at least 15,000,000 Covid vaccine doses since March, according to government data obtained by @NBCNews.
Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- On this week’s Dispatch Podcast, Sarah, Steve, Jonah, and David discuss and debate the latest in Afghanistan, whether we should be concerned about increasing political violence, and the latest happenings at the Supreme Court.
- Jonah took a buzzsaw to President Biden’s Afghanistan withdrawal speech in Wednesday’s G-File (🔒). “In his address yesterday, Biden wasn’t just arguing with strawmen hovering around him like Banquo’s ghost,” Jonah writes. “He deployed a now-familiar tactic. He would try to rebut criticisms of the execution of his policy by defending the policy in the abstract. If I use a makeshift aerosol flamethrower to kill an ant in my kitchen, I won’t get far with my wife if I respond to criticism about the fire damage by saying: ‘Oh, I suppose you want ants to take over our kitchen?’”
- In Wednesday’s Capitolism (🔒), Scott Lincicome dives into the regulatory barriers behind the United States’ dearth of at-home COVID-19 testing kits. “The FDA’s restrictions on the domestic supply of at-home rapid tests has had unsurprising (albeit still depressing) results,” he writes. “Home test kits are not ubiquitous; prices are relatively high (at least $20 for a two-pack); and, given the first and second issues, they’re not very widely used. Back in Germany, by contrast, they’re available basically everywhere and cost less than a buck per test.”
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— Democrats already control the vast majority of seats along the eastern seaboard from Virginia to Maine. — New York offers Democrats their greatest gerrymandering upside of any state, but it is not guaranteed that they will maximize their holdings there. — Virginia’s unproven new commission system makes redistricting there a mystery, although Republicans could re-take control of the state’s congressional delegation through a combination of redistricting fortune and strong electoral performance. — Republicans in New Hampshire and Democrats in Maryland face notable gerrymandering decisions. The Northeast and Mid-AtlanticThe Democratic Party is sometimes referred to as a “coastal” party. Indeed, Democrats hold a 53-15 edge in the combined U.S. House delegations of the West Coast states of California, Oregon, and Washington. But on the country’s Atlantic Coast stretching from Virginia Beach to eastern Maine, Democrats have an even larger advantage in the nine states in the region with more than one congressional district: 63-15. Add in one-district Delaware and Vermont, and the edge expands to 65-15. So that means that in 2020, when Democrats won a narrow 222-213 majority in the House, the Democratic advantage in the Northeast (as defined here) and the West Coast was a combined 118-30. The Republicans have an edge of 183-104 in the rest of the country. Democrats likely need to expand upon this edge in order to hold the House next year. We already looked at the West Coast states several weeks ago. Now we turn to the Northeast. The nine states in this week’s redistricting update are, from north to south, Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, and Virginia. Joe Biden won all of these states, with his closest victory coming by seven points in New Hampshire. Democrats also hold a majority of the House seats in all nine of these states; that includes holding all of the seats in the six-state region of New England. The Northeast includes what is the Democrats’ best chance to inflict real gerrymandering damage on Republicans: New York, although they will have to go around a new commission in order to do so. It also includes states where both parties will have to make important redistricting decisions, most notably Democrats in Maryland and Republicans in New Hampshire. And in our home state of Virginia, we’ll get to see how another new and untested commission system designed to make redistricting less partisan ends up working out. CONNECTICUTNumber of seats: 5 (no change from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 5-0 D Current party breakdown: 5-0 D Most overpopulated district: CT-4 (Southwest Connecticut) Most underpopulated district: CT-2 (Eastern Connecticut) Who controls redistricting: Split 2012 control: Split Connecticut is one of several states across the nation that used to feature strong competition at the U.S. House level but didn’t have much action last decade. Democrats won all five seats in all five election years last decade, and that was on a congressional map that was not gerrymandered to produce such an outcome. A big reason for Connecticut’s transition from congressional battleground to Democratic bastion has been the long erosion of Republican strength in Fairfield County, the affluent, highly-educated part of the state that is closest to New York City and is the largest source of votes in the state. In 1996, Fairfield voted Democratic for president for just the second time since World War II (1964 was the other exception, as it so often was for historically Republican places in the North). By 2020, Fairfield was up to a 27-point margin for Joe Biden, the biggest margin it had given any Democrat for president possibly ever, or at least since at least the early 1880s (that’s as far back as Dave Leip’s Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections goes). Former Rep. Chris Shays, the last Republican to win an election to the congressional district that covers Fairfield County, CT-4, is an exemplar of the moderate Republicanism that used to predominate in parts of the region. Elected in a 1987 special election, he first ran for reelection in 1988 — he claimed 72% while, up the ballot, George H. W. Bush took 57% in CT-4. Shays held on for three decades and was not seriously challenged until George W. Bush was in the White House. Finally, in 2008, as Barack Obama carried CT-4 by 20 points, Shays came up four points short against now-Rep. Jim Himes (D, CT-4). A dozen years later, CT-4 was Biden’s best district in the state. Some of the Republican tradition in this part of the state still endures: Republicans recently won a special election for a state Senate seat that covers Greenwich and the New York border that voted heavily for Biden. However, state-level races in the district are typically much closer. Some other parts of Connecticut flirted with Donald Trump in 2016 — he came within three points of winning Eastern Connecticut’s CT-2 and within about four of winning Northwest Connecticut’s CT-5, which was the state’s most competitive district at the U.S. House level in the 2010s. But, as it was in nearly every other congressional district in New England in 2020, Biden did better than Hillary Clinton, and he carried all five congressional districts in Connecticut by double digits. As Map 1 shows, in addition to holding all five congressional districts, Biden picked up almost three dozen towns that supported Donald Trump in 2016. Map 1: Connecticut town loyalty, 2016-2020The bottom line in Connecticut is that under optimal circumstances, Republicans might be able to compete for one or more of its districts this decade. But if they do, redistricting likely will not have been a major contributor to that happening. MAINENumber of seats: 2 (no change from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 2-0 D Current party breakdown: 2-0 D Most overpopulated district: ME-1 (Portland/Southwest Maine) Most underpopulated district: ME-2 (Northern Maine) Who controls redistricting: Split 2012 control: Split The 2020 presidential election further strengthened the correlation between presidential and U.S. House results. According to Gary Jacobson, a leading U.S. House scholar, there was a .987 correlation between the presidential and House results in 2020 (on a zero-to-one scale), the highest such correlation since at least 1952. Just 16 districts produced a split result for president and for House. One of those handful of districts was in Maine, where Rep. Jared Golden (D, ME-2) won a second term. Golden won by six points against an overmatched opponent while Trump carried his district by almost 7.5 points. In 2022, Golden appears likely to once again face former Rep. Bruce Poliquin (R, ME-2), whom Golden narrowly defeated in 2018. The fate of ME-2 is what’s worth watching in Maine, as the state’s other district, held by Rep. Chellie Pingree (D, ME-1), is safely Democratic. ME-1, which covers the state’s largest city, Portland, and some tourist-heavy areas along the state’s southern coast, has an above-average rate of four-year college attainment, an important predictor of Democratic trends in recent years. Meanwhile, ME-2 is below-average on college attainment and is more working-class. Due in large part to these demographic differences, Maine’s districts have taken divergent electoral paths. Since the 1972 presidential election, Maine has allocated its electoral votes by congressional district — during that time, geographically, the two districts have changed little. Table 1 considers presidential elections in Maine since 1972. Into the 1990s, the two were never more than five percentage points apart. The gap widened with the new century, and in 2020, Maine’s two districts were over 30 percentage points apart. Table 1: Maine elections by congressional district, 1972-2020The most straightforward way to address the population imbalance between ME-1 and ME-2 could involve Augusta itself. Kennebec County, home of the quaint state capital, is currently the only county in the state divided between the two districts. It would make sense to just alter the lines within the county to balance the populations, perhaps by switching Augusta itself or the city of Waterville to ME-2. Doing so would reduce ME-2’s Trump percentage, but the changes would be measured more in terms of tenths of a percentage point as opposed to full points. In other words, Golden is still going to be defending a Trump-won district. One positive thing for Golden is that voters in the district still differentiate among different parties in different races: While Golden was winning by six points last November, Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) won the district by 24 points. But Golden should still be in for a significant test next year. MARYLANDNumber of seats: 8 (no change from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 7-1 D Current party breakdown: 7-1 D Most overpopulated district: MD-4 (Eastern Washington, D.C. suburbs) Most underpopulated district: MD-7 (West Side Baltimore and suburbs) Who controls redistricting: Democrats 2012 control: Democrats Over the past decade, when Democrats complained about gerrymanders in states like North Carolina and Ohio, Republicans, almost without fail, would point to Maryland — and not without good reason. Maryland, with its wiggly lines and barely contiguous districts, has one of the ugliest congressional maps in the country. After 2010, Democrats held a 6-2 advantage in the state’s delegation. As Maryland was one of the few states Democrats had control over a decade ago, they aimed to expand that advantage. The result was a 7-1 map that was passed by the legislature and signed by then-Gov. Martin O’Malley (D-MD). The enacted plan worked out as intended for the duration of the decade, although MD-6, the seat that Democrats gained in 2012, nearly reverted back to the GOP in 2014. Still, even partisan Democrats often cringe at the map’s odd shapes. MD-3, for example, was drawn for Rep. John Sarbanes — though it was long a Baltimore-area seat, it takes in a part of Montgomery County, in Washington D.C.’s suburbs, and then juts out to grab the state capital, Annapolis. Sarbanes, whose father was a senator, has been rumored to have statewide ambitions himself. By representing such an odd seat, he’s been able to establish himself in disparate corners of the state — something that would serve him well in a state campaign. Though Gov. Larry Hogan (R-MD) remains popular and has worked to establish an independent commission aimed at drawing fair maps, the reality is that Democrats hold veto-proof majorities in the state legislature, thus giving them redistricting power. In a recent U.S. Supreme Court case, plaintiffs alleged that Maryland’s gerrymandered districts violated the First Amendment rights of its voters. The high court declined to intervene in 2019, ruling that federal courts could not constrain partisan gerrymandering. Maryland’s map was left untouched. Though Democratic mappers will have to draw plans that would satisfy the state Court of Appeals — the highest court in the state, where Republican-appointed judges hold a majority — they otherwise have broad latitude. Still, there is a possibility that the state’s high court could intervene on behalf of Republicans much as Democratic-majority state courts have intervened on behalf of Democrats on redistricting matters in North Carolina and Pennsylvania in recent years. Democrats could try for an 8-0 monopoly in the delegation by targeting Rep. Andy Harris (R, MD-1), who was the sole Republican from the state elected last decade. A member of the Freedom Caucus, Harris is a strident conservative. Earlier this year, dozens of Democratic state legislators accused him of complicity in the Jan. 6 insurrection — though altering his seat may have already been on their minds, this could be a convenient justification for drawing him out. MD-1 has long been characterized as an Eastern Shore district, but it also includes some suburban counties closer to Baltimore — Harris is from Harford County, in the latter category. The suburban Baltimore component is actually the more Republican-leaning part of the district: Trump carried the Eastern Shore 57%-41% while he took over 60% in the rest of the district. In any case, the Eastern Shore, with 456,000 residents, has enough population for just under 60% of a district. Mappers could take MD-1 across the Chesapeake Bay Bridge and bring it into Anne Arundel and Prince George’s counties — it could also feasibly take in some Democratic Baltimore-area precincts. So there are a few ways to draw a Democratic-leaning seat that includes the Eastern Shore. The remainder of the current MD-1 — areas like Harford County — could be split among the adjacent Democratic seats. By composition, Maryland is about 30% Black, and two of its districts currently have Black majorities. Rep. Anthony Brown’s (D, MD-4) seat is based mainly in Prince George’s County, hugging Washington D.C. MD-4 is 53% Black, and will need to shed about 50,000 people. MD-7, which has a Baltimore focus, is the state’s slowest-growing seat and is just over 50% Black — Baltimore City lost population over the past decade. Rep. Kweisi Mfume (D, MD-7) is on his second congressional tour: He represented the seat from 1987 to 1996, then was replaced by the noteworthy Rep. Elijah Cummings. When Cummings died in 2019, Mfume defeated his successor’s widow to regain the seat. MD-7 will need to pick up about 50,000 residents — to sustain its slim Black majority, it could add some heavily minority precincts. This may make it harder for Democrats to shore up adjacent Reps. John Sarbanes and Dutch Ruppersberger, especially if Democrats also opt to make Harris’s seat bluer. Though it is possible to draw a third Black-majority seat, MD-5 may soon elect a Black member anyway. MD-5, which pairs a significant chunk of Prince George’s County with southern Maryland, is just over 40% Black and is held by House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D, MD-5) — originally elected in 1981, Hoyer is one of the longest-serving members in state history. In the 2016 Democratic primary for Senate, then-Reps. Chris Van Hollen and Donna Edwards faced off. Though Van Hollen won the primary by 14 points, Edwards, a progressive Black woman, carried MD-5 by a 50%-41% margin. It probably helped that Edwards was from the adjacent MD-4, but it is not hard to see a Black candidate winning an open-seat primary in MD-5. At 82, it seems likely Hoyer will retire sometime over the next few cycles — in his 2020 primary, he received some opposition, though still won with over 60%. In the Washington D.C. suburbs, Montgomery County, with a population of over a million people, is the state’s largest county. While Sarbanes’ MD-3 has a small part of it, the county is otherwise split between Democratic Reps. David Trone’s MD-6 and Jamie Raskin’s MD-8 — while both districts include some less populous counties, they are both comfortably blue most of the time, although Democrats may want to shore up MD-6, considering their close call in 2014. Overall, drawing an 8-0 map is probably doable for Democrats, though getting enough incumbents on board, and ensuring that each district is adequately blue, may be tricky. If Democrats opt for another 7-1 plan, it seems likely they’ll simply clean up the current map. MASSACHUSETTSNumber of seats: 9 (no change from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 9-0 D Current party breakdown: 9-0 D Most overpopulated district: MA-7 (Boston) Most underpopulated district: MA-1 (Western Massachusetts) Who controls redistricting: Democrats 2012 control: Democrats Heavily Democratic Massachusetts is the biggest state in which one of the two major parties is completely shut out of the U.S. House delegation. In fact, Republicans have not won a House election in the Bay State since 1994. Even more strikingly, none of the districts are even particularly close: The closest district based on the 2020 presidential results was the Cape Cod-based MA-9 held by Rep. Bill Keating (D), which Biden still won by nearly 18 points. And all nine districts each gave double-digit margins to the Democratic presidential nominee in 2012, 2016, and 2020. A Republican has not won one of the state’s 14 counties for president since 1988, which helps demonstrate the party’s weakness throughout the state. In 2012, Republicans did come close to beating then-Rep. John Tierney (D, MA-6), who was hurt by his family’s legal problems. But Tierney lost a primary to now-Rep. Seth Moulton (D, MA-6) in 2014, and Moulton has solidified Democratic control of the district. While Massachusetts does have a Republican governor, Charlie Baker, Democrats hold veto-proof majorities in the state legislature. After having to eliminate a district a decade ago, the legislature’s job is easier this time. Its main job will be adding about 50,000 residents to Western Massachusetts’ MA-1, held by senior Democrat Richard Neal. The bottom line is that if there is a very competitive House race in Massachusetts in November 2022, something will have gone terribly wrong for Democrats. NEW HAMPSHIRENumber of seats: 2 (no change from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 2-0 D Current party breakdown: 2-0 D Most overpopulated district: NH-1 (Manchester/Eastern New Hampshire) Most underpopulated district: NH-2 (Western New Hampshire) Who controls redistricting: Republicans 2012 control: Split Landmark U.S. Supreme Court decisions in the early 1960s enshrined the concept of “one person, one vote” into congressional redistricting, which created the now-familiar rhythm of redistricting following the release of the decennial census. The first full national redistricting cycle following a census release was in advance of the 1972 election, and there have been full redistricting cycles at the start of every decade since. But prior to those decisions, some states redistricted very infrequently. New Hampshire is an extreme example: The state had the same congressional district lines in place from the early 1880s all the way until the late 1960s. Still, the lines have only barely changed in recent decades. NH-1 covers some of the eastern part of the state, including Manchester, Portsmouth, and Dover, while NH-2, which has the city of Nashua, covers the rest of the state. In the 1880s, mappers — the state was then controlled by Yankees with GOP loyalties — put Manchester and Nashua in separate districts to dilute the growing white ethnic/Catholic vote, which tended to go Democratic. Today, both districts are winnable by either party under the right circumstances, but Democrats have held the more Democratic western seat (Biden +8.7 in 2020) since 2012 and the more competitive NH-1 since 2016 (Biden +6). New Hampshire has been the most Republican state at the presidential level in New England for a half-century: The last time any of the region’s six states gave the Republican presidential nominee a better margin than New Hampshire was way back in 1968 — that was Vermont, a traditionally Republican state that has become extremely Democratic at the federal level in recent decades. That said, New Hampshire has not voted Republican for president since 2000. This Democratic trend is reflected in the state’s delegation to Congress, which is all Democratic (two senators and two House members). But the state’s Republican tradition is alive and well at the state level, as Gov. Chris Sununu (R) won reelection last year in a landslide, aiding a Republican takeover of both chambers of the state legislature. That surprising victory gave Republicans redistricting power in the state. They now have to consider whether to try to gerrymander NH-1 in such a way to put Rep. Chris Pappas (D, NH-1) in further peril. One way to do this would be to move Manchester into NH-2, strengthening Democrats there, while moving Coos County in northern New Hampshire as well as some Republican-leaning turf in southern New Hampshire into NH-1. This kind of reconfiguration would reduce Biden’s winning margin in the district from half a dozen points to more like one or two points. A more dramatic gerrymander could turn NH-1 into a narrow Trump seat, but one wonders what the appetite would be for such a dramatic transformation of congressional district lines that have not changed much in close to a century and a half. The other Republican consideration might be this: In a good enough year, Republicans could conceivably win both seats in historically very swingy New Hampshire, but strengthening Republicans in NH-1 would likely move NH-2 out of the range in which it was plausibly winnable for Republicans. Perhaps Granite State Republicans already believe NH-2 isn’t a seat they can compete for anymore, which would be an argument for making NH-1 less Democratic. NEW JERSEYNumber of seats: 12 (no change from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 6-6 Split Current party breakdown: 10-2 D Most overpopulated district: NJ-8 (Hoboken/Elizabeth/Part of Newark) Most underpopulated district: NJ-2 (South Jersey) Who controls redistricting: Commission 2012 control: Commission New Jersey is an example of how a district plan that appears to favor one side at the start of the decade can perform contrary to expectations by the end of the decade. The Garden State uses a commission system in which each party gets six members. Those 12 members then decide on a 13th member to break ties. A decade ago and as New Jersey was losing a district due to slower population growth, the tiebreaker sided with Republicans on the congressional map, and two incumbent Democrats ended up running against each other in North Jersey: Rep. Bill Pascrell (D, NJ-9) prevailed in that primary. The GOP map also modestly reconfigured NJ-3, a swing seat that Republicans had captured in 2010, which had the effect of strengthening Republicans in that seat. In both 2012 and 2014, New Jersey produced a 6-6 congressional delegation in a state that otherwise clearly leans Democratic. But Republicans held a number of districts in North Jersey that are relatively affluent, suburban/exurban, and highly-educated. They lost one in 2016, when now-Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D, NJ-5) defeated social conservative Scott Garrett (R), and then two more in 2018, when now-Reps. Tom Malinowski (D, NJ-7) and Mikie Sherrill (D, NJ-11) won similar districts. All three of these districts voted for Mitt Romney in 2012 but then flipped to Democratic presidential nominees in 2016 and/or 2020. Meanwhile, in South Jersey, Trump twice won NJ-2 and NJ-3 after Barack Obama carried them in 2012, but that did not prevent Democrats from capturing both seats in 2018. Rep. Andy Kim (D, NJ-3) won a second term last year despite Trump carrying his district by just a couple tenths of a percentage point, while Rep. Jeff Van Drew (R, NJ-2) switched parties during Trump’s first impeachment fight and won a second term last year. Even at 10-2 — down from an 11-1 high water mark prior to Van Drew’s defection — Democrats still have what is otherwise their largest edge in the New Jersey House delegation since the 1974 election, a huge year for Democrats nationally when Democrats won a 12-3 advantage in the Garden State. Realistically, protecting this edge under what might be trying electoral circumstances in 2022 would be a significant win for Democrats. They caught a break in the redistricting commission process: The two parties could not come to an agreement on a tiebreaking commission member, so they punted the decision to the state Supreme Court, which selected the Democrats’ preferred tiebreaker. That doesn’t necessarily mean that the Democrats will get to gerrymander, but they may have a better chance of getting their preferred map compared to the Republicans. Because New Jersey is not adding or subtracting any seats, it may be that there are not huge changes. But there are adjustments that will have to be made because of population. One positive for Democrats is that the two most overpopulated districts, those held by Reps. Albio Sires (D, NJ-8) and Donald M. Payne Jr. (D, NJ-10) in the parts of New Jersey closest to New York City, are also by far the two most Democratic districts in the state. So the swing districts in North Jersey, all of which need to grow to some extent, could hypothetically get strengthened by taking little pieces of the overpopulated New York City-area seats. But the districts could be redrawn in lots of different ways. Based on 2020, the most vulnerable Democrat in the delegation may be Malinowski, even though Biden did better in his district than in any of the others that Democrats picked up in the state in 2016 and 2018. He faces a rematch with state Senate Minority Leader Tom Kean Jr. (R), who nearly beat him last year. Joey Fox of the New Jersey Globe described three different scenarios for re-drawing NJ-7 in which the district hardly changes at all, gets more Democratic by extending further into the New York City area, or gets more Republican by becoming more western-oriented. Whatever happens in NJ-7 could have ripple effects in NJ-5 and NJ-11, too. Under the current map, all three of these districts are winnable for Republicans, but perhaps the changes will make one or more markedly less or more competitive. Meanwhile, the competitive NJ-2 (held by Van Drew) and NJ-3 (held by Kim) are both underpopulated, so each will need to grow. One possible solution could involve swaps between the districts to shore up both incumbents, although Republicans will still want to compete for NJ-3 and Democrats may still want to target NJ-2, particularly if redistricting made the district bluer. A pro-incumbent scenario would probably have Van Drew take in more of Ocean County, which is the more Republican part of the current NJ-3. As with many other commission states, we find it difficult to handicap what might happen. Democrats did win the first battle of the fight by getting their preferred tiebreaker, but much else is uncertain. Beyond redistricting, New Jersey is a good state to watch to measure any possible backlash against the Biden White House. A big Republican year would necessarily entail them winning back some highly-educated suburban seats where Trump was relatively weak compared to previous Republicans. Several seats in New Jersey fit that description. NEW YORKNumber of seats: 26 (-1 from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 21-6 D Current party breakdown: 19-8 D Most overpopulated district: NY-12 (East Side Manhattan/Astoria/Greenpoint) Most underpopulated district: NY-23 (Western New York’s Southern Tier) Who controls redistricting: Democrats 2012 control: Split Over the past several decades, New York’s congressional reappointment, summed up in the 2000 edition of the Almanac of American Politics, could be described as “carnage.” Since the 1950 census, the state has sent fewer members to the House each decade. In 1952, the first election after the downsizing trend started, the Empire State elected 43 representatives — next year, that number will be down to 26. For 2020, the bloodletting nearly stopped. To the chagrin of New Yorkers, the Census Bureau announced that, had the state reported just 89 more residents, it would have retained all its seats. Still, at some points during this past decade, the state seemed to be on track to lose two seats, as it did in the 2010 census — so New Yorkers may take some cold comfort in that their losses could have been worse. New York also may not have lost any seats were it not for COVID-19; a recent study by political scientists Jonathan Cervas and Bernard Grofman found that New York was the only state to lose a seat because of deaths early in the pandemic. Though New York will again be losing representation in Congress, the regime in Albany has changed. Ten years ago, then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D-NY) had just won his first term, and he seemed intent on preserving his clean, reformist image — he pledged to veto any congressional map that featured gerrymandered districts. After the Republican-controlled state Senate and the Democratic state Assembly could not agree on a compromise plan, the process was kicked to a three-judge panel, which passed a map. U.S. Magistrate Judge Roanne Mann, who the panel designated to draw the map, seemed to aim for geographic and partisan balance when finding districts to cut. The seat held by Rep. Maurice Hinchey, an Upstate Democrat who was retiring anyway, was eliminated, while Republican Rep. Bob Turner, who won a 2011 special election to the seat previously held by the now-infamous Anthony Weiner (D) and was the delegation’s most junior member, also saw his New York City-area seat vanish. Despite the deadlocked legislature, one reform that came out of the 2010 round of redistricting was an independent commission, although it would not be in place until 2020. Legislative leaders put language establishing the commission on the November 2014 ballot — it was approved 58%-42%. While the commission includes members of both parties and will draft maps, the legislature is not obligated to follow its recommendations: if the legislature rejects the commission’s plans twice, legislators can amend the maps. The 2014 constitutional amendment also established standards for passing maps: if control of the legislature is split, a simple majority in each chamber is required to pass maps, but if one party controls both houses (as Democrats do), a two-thirds vote is needed. In November, New Yorkers will vote on another referendum that is aimed at lowering the latter threshold. If Proposal 1 is passed, the Democratic legislature’s two-thirds threshold will be reduced to a simple majority standard. Democrats already have large enough majorities in both chambers to clear the two-thirds threshold, but Proposal 1 would give them more room for defections. Democrats have controlled the state Assembly since the 1970s, but in 2018, they flipped the state Senate and expanded their majority in 2020. The embattled Cuomo recently resigned, turning the governorship over to Kathy Hochul (D), the now-former lieutenant governor. Hochul is running for a full term next year and faces a potentially competitive primary. Perhaps with that in mind, she has signaled a willingness to play hardball, if necessary, to help Democrats pass favorable maps. Hochul may have other personal reasons for being a team player: She knows firsthand what it’s like to come up on the short end of the redistricting process. In 2011, she won a special election for a Republican-leaning seat that spanned from Buffalo to Rochester. The plan that the three-judge panel enacted did not help her — running for reelection in a similar seat the next year, she lost 51%-49%, though she still ran more than 10 points ahead of Barack Obama’s showing in the district. So, if Hochul and the Democratic legislature get their way, what would their map look like? Starting on Long Island, four-term Rep. Lee Zeldin (R, NY-1) is running for governor and is leaving behind an open seat that is entirely within Suffolk County. Next door, first-term Republican Rep. Andrew Garbarino’s NY-2 is also based mostly in Suffolk County, though it also contains part of Nassau County. As drawn, Trump carried both districts by about four points last year — in congressional races, Democrats have watched heralded candidates come up short in those districts over recent cycles. Democrats’ solution may be to concede one while making the other more winnable. Moving the cities of Brentwood and Wyandanch into NY-1 would turn it into a slightly Democratic-leaning seat while NY-2, which already includes a red part of Nassau County, could take in Republican parts of NY-1. Moving west, Rep. Tom Suozzi’s (D, NY-3) district takes in parts of northern Suffolk and Nassau counties, but will probably expand its holdings in Democratic areas of Queens. Rep. Kathleen Rice’s (D, NY-4) seat is entirely confined to Nassau County, and that could still be the case next year. Democrats could shore her up by moving some minority-heavy precincts in western Nassau from NY-5 into NY-4. As drawn, both NY-3 and NY-4 gave Biden about 55% — a clear majority, but in the event of a bad year, Democrats would probably want to increase that number. Currently, New York City includes all or parts of 13 districts. Democrats hold all of those districts except for NY-11, which they will almost certainly look to flip. Democrats held that district from 2018 to 2020, but the seat fell back into Republican hands last year when then-state Assemblywoman Nicole Malliotakis beat then-Rep. Max Rose (D, NY-11) by six points. NY-11 is mostly based in Staten Island, which has enough population for about 65% of a district, and usually leans Republican (Malliotakis carried it 55%-45%). On the current plan, the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge connects Staten Island to some neighborhoods in Brooklyn, such as Fort Hamilton and Gravesend — the Brooklyn part of NY-11 is Democratic, but not overwhelmingly so, as it supported Rose 52%-48%. Assuming mappers keep Staten Island whole, Democrats could turn NY-11 into a Biden district (Trump carried the current version by just over 10 points) by giving it different areas of Brooklyn, or perhaps even bringing it into Manhattan (this was the case a century ago). There is little question that the other 12 districts in New York City will remain Democratic, so other considerations, such as racial demographics, will inform the line-drawing more than anything else — as the Crystal Ball showed a few months ago, when we previewed the mayoral primary, NYC is certainly a diverse city. In Queens, for example, Rep. Grace Meng (D, NY-6) holds the most heavily Asian district on the Eastern Seaboard. Her NY-6 is currently about 45% Asian, but could possibly become Asian-majority. Democratic incumbents will also have personal preferences. Veteran Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D, NY-12) has had some competitive primaries over the last few cycles: she has a base in Manhattan but, in primaries, has polled poorly in the gentrifying Long Island part of her district. Maloney may be reluctant to take on much more territory from the latter. Maloney’s geographic situation is ironic when considering how she ended up in Congress. She was first elected in 1992, beating moderate Republican Rep. Bill Green: Green narrowly carried Manhattan, where the bulk of the district was located, but Maloney won by taking over 60% on its Long Island portion. Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D, NY-10) also has a sizable portion of Manhattan, but his district reaches down into Brooklyn to include some heavily Orthodox Jewish precincts. As an aside, because of Orthodox Jews and other conservative constituencies, it is possible to draw a Republican-leaning seat in Brooklyn, but Democrats will probably ensure GOP strength there remains diluted. It is possible that either, or both, of Maloney or Nadler may retire — they were both originally elected in 1992 and will each be 75 or older by Election Day 2022 — which could make things easier on mappers. Moving north of the city, some big changes are likely in store for Upstate New York: currently, five of the eight Republicans in the state’s delegation are from there. On an effective Democratic gerrymander, Republicans could be reduced to just two Upstate seats. Reps. Elise Stefanik (R, NY-21) and Claudia Tenney (R, NY-22) both ran as allies of former President Trump and hold adjacent seats. Stefanik’s district takes in the North Country and overlaps with Adirondack National Park. Politically, the area that makes up the current NY-21 votes like many blue collar pockets of the Midwest: after giving Obama modest majorities, it supported Trump by double-digits. Tenney was first elected in 2016 to a seat just to the south, which includes Utica and Oneida. Two years later, Tenney lost 51%-49% to Democratic state Assemblyman Anthony Brindisi — however, in an agonizing result for Democrats, Brindisi lost a 2020 rematch by 109 votes. Though Democratic partisans would very much like to defeat both Upstate Republican women, from a practical standpoint, they would probably be better off giving one a safe seat — that way, adjacent seats would be more Democratic. It would not be hard to build a safely red seat around the Mohawk Valley, an area that Stefanik and Tenney each currently represent parts of. One source of Democratic votes in NY-21 is Clinton County (Plattsburgh), in the district’s northeastern corner. Rep. Anthony Delgado’s (D, NY-19) Hudson Valley-area seat could reach up to grab Clinton County, although the area is not as blue as it used to be: while Obama carried Clinton County twice by about 25 points, it has gone Democratic by only single digits in presidential races since. Democrats likely also will try to shore up Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chairman Sean Patrick Maloney (D, NY-18), who holds a Trump/Biden district south of Delgado’s turf. Aside from drawing a red seat encompassing the Mohawk Valley, Democrats will likely draw a safely Republican seat in western New York. This could be accomplished by combining the reddest parts of the current NY-23 (the Southern Tier) and NY-27 (the Buffalo-to-Rochester district that is the descendant of Hochul’s old seat). As Rep. Tom Reed (R, NY-23) is retiring, Rep. Chris Jacobs (R, NY-27) would probably be favored for this seat. With two solidly Republican Upstate seats out of the way, Democrats will look to monopolize the rest of the region — and the lines could be creative, to say the least. In the Albany area, Rep. Paul Tonko (D, NY-20) may be the Upstate Democrat who sees the fewest substantive changes to his district: his seat will likely remain anchored in the state’s capital city — while it is not as blue as the NYC districts, it should be out of reach for Republicans (the current version supported Biden by 21%). In western New York, Rep. Brian Higgins (D, NY-26) currently holds a district that contains all of Buffalo. His district could easily take in more surrounding precincts in Erie County, as Democrats unpack it somewhat. Higgins’ current district gave Biden a 27-point margin, and he himself is one of Congress’ lower-profile electoral overperformers. It seems likely that mappers will take excess Democrats from Buffalo and, using Niagara and Orleans counties as a bridge, connect them to Democrats in the Rochester area — in the first decade of the 2000s, the late Rep. Louise Slaughter (D) represented a seat with a similar configuration. Rep. Joe Morelle (D, NY-25), who replaced Slaughter after her 2018 death, could run in that seat. After recreating the Slaughter seat, Democrats will probably still have some blue turf left over in Rochester’s Monroe County. This area could be put into Republican Rep. John Katko’s Syracuse-area district. Katko was initially elected in 2014, and, to the frustration of Democrats, this moderate Republican has remained popular in his blue seat. It is possible that, with enough new (and Democratic-leaning) constituents, Katko would be more vulnerable in a general election or primary (Katko voted for the second impeachment of Donald Trump, drawing the former president’s ire). For good measure, it’s easy to see Democrats cracking Syracuse’s Onondaga County. The part of Onondaga County that doesn’t end up with Rochester could be put with other smaller Upstate metros. Tompkins County, which includes Ithaca (Cornell University), is the bluest Upstate county — in fact, speaking to Biden’s gains with college whites and Trump’s improvement with minorities, 2020 was the first time ever that Tompkins County was more Democratic than Queens. Tompkins County is currently in the GOP-leaning NY-23, so it will almost certainly be removed. A district that includes Tompkins County and part of Onondaga County could grab some blue precincts in Utica. Map 2 illustrates a possible pro-Democratic gerrymander of Upstate New York. Two districts, NY-21 and NY-23, are deeply red, while a stretch of four blue districts span from Buffalo to Utica. Rep. Tonko keeps an Albany-based seat while Delgado’s NY-19 reaches up to Plattsburgh. Districts in Map 2 are colored by their 2012-2016 presidential average: districts 22, 24, 25, and 26 are all about 56% Democratic. Map 2: Hypothetical Upstate New York Democratic gerrymanderIf everything falls into place for Democrats — something that is not guaranteed — they could expand their current 19-8 edge in the delegation to 23-3. Given their relatively weak hand in other regions of the country, if the battle for the House is truly close, that type of windfall in New York could feasibly save their slim majority. RHODE ISLANDNumber of seats: 2 (no change from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 2-0 D Current party breakdown: 2-0 D Most overpopulated district: RI-1 (Most of Providence/eastern Rhode Island) Most underpopulated district: RI-2 (Western Rhode Island) Who controls redistricting: Democrats 2012 control: Democrats Rhode Island was on the bubble in the 2020 reapportionment, and it surprisingly ended up keeping its second seat. Whether Rhode Island lost a seat or kept it, the analysis was going to be pretty straightforward either way: Democrats either would hold two safe seats in the state, or they would hold one. The Ocean State’s two districts divide the state into western and eastern halves, and each contains part of the state’s largest city and capital, Providence. The eastern part is geographically smaller and runs down to Newport, the seaside tourist destination that is also home to the Naval War College. The western RI-2 contains most of the state’s land mass and is less diverse. Donald Trump came within about seven points of winning RI-2 in 2016, though he lost the district by close to double that in 2020, and Rep. Jim Langevin (D, RI-2) was not seriously challenged even in 2016. RI-1 backed Biden by nearly 30 points last year. If it was an open seat and if aided by other circumstances, Republicans could hypothetically compete for RI-2, so perhaps Democrats will want to shore up the district to some degree. But Democrats also could just make very minimal changes, as RI-1 only has to shed roughly 5,000 residents to RI-2. VIRGINIANumber of seats: 11 (no change from 2010s) Breakdown in 2012: 8-3 R Current party breakdown: 7-4 D Most overpopulated district: VA-10 (Northern Virginia: Leesburg/McLean/Manassas) Most underpopulated district: VA-9 (Western Virginia) Who controls redistricting: Commission 2012 control: Republicans Virginia, which includes the former capital of the Confederacy and has long been identified as a pillar of the Old South, now stands apart from the nation’s historically most conservative region. It has become so much of an outlier that we grouped it not with the South in this series, but rather with the Mid-Atlantic/Northeastern states. The Old Dominion was the only Southern state that Hillary Clinton won in 2016, and one of only two Joe Biden won in 2020 (Georgia was the other). Democrats control only two state legislative chambers in the entire South: the two in Virginia, although the state House of Delegates is on the ballot this fall, along with the state’s three state-level statewide elected offices (governor, lieutenant governor, and attorney general, all of which the Democrats also hold). Virginia is also the only Southern state that now has a commission system for redistricting: Voters approved it in a statewide vote last year after the legislature put it on the ballot. Without this new system, Democrats would control the levers of redistricting in the state and could strengthen and even expand their 7-4 edge in the state’s congressional delegation. As it stands now, it is unclear who may come out ahead, but Republicans could conceivably re-take a majority in the state’s congressional delegation next year. A decade ago, Republicans held gerrymandering power in Virginia, and they drew a map that resulted in an 8-3 Republican delegation in both 2012 and 2014. But a racial redistricting lawsuit forced the unpacking of Rep. Bobby Scott’s (D, VA-3) then-majority-Black district. That change transformed Scott’s Richmond-to-Norfolk district into one centered just on the Hampton Roads area, freeing Richmond and other Democratic areas to be put into VA-4, which now-Rep. Don McEachin (D) easily won. The changes also weakened Republican performance in VA-7, which contains western parts of the Richmond area and extends into Central Virginia. Conversely, the new map strengthened Republicans in VA-2, which covers Virginia Beach and other parts of Hampton Roads. Democrats ended up winning and holding both VA-2 and VA-7 in 2018 and 2020 — it seems likely that they would have come up short in VA-7 without the changes. So the 2016 remap contributed to Democrats winning two additional seats, and they flipped VA-2 even though redistricting made the district less Democratic. The pre-2016 remap was only partial, and Democrats won the unchanged VA-10 in 2018, a highly-educated Northern Virginia suburban seat that has shifted so heavily against Republicans that it isn’t really a swing seat anymore: Mitt Romney won it by a point in 2012; eight years later, Trump lost it by 19. As of now, Democrats control seven seats and Republicans control four. The Democrats hold four seats in the combined Richmond/Hampton Roads area, and they hold the three dedicated Northern Virginia seats. Republicans hold three districts in Western/Central Virginia — an area our former colleague Geoffrey Skelley once described as “RoVa,” as in the Rest of Virginia outside of Northern Virginia/Greater Richmond/Hampton Roads — and one district, VA-1, that extends from the southern portions of Northern Virginia’s fast-growing Prince William County all the way down to the fringes of Colonial Williamsburg. That district has become more competitive recently, as Trump only won it by about 4.5 points, although Rep. Rob Wittman (R) ran way ahead of Trump. The commission, composed of a bipartisan group of state legislators and citizens, is off to a rocky start, to the point where some — particularly Democrats — worry that the commission process, which also involves getting approval from the state legislature, will fail. If that happens, it will be up to the conservative state Supreme Court to draw the maps (the justices on that court are appointed by the state legislature, which has been mostly dominated by Republicans for the past couple of decades). The commission did recently agree to try to start from scratch on creating new maps as opposed to using the current districts as a template. One could interpret this as a positive for Democrats, given that the current congressional map was drawn, at least in part, by Republicans. However, as noted above, that gerrymander was altered in important ways already. It’s also hard to really “start from scratch” on a redistricting map. For instance, the current Democratic-held VA-3 and VA-4 are substantially Black (though neither are currently majority-Black). Significantly strengthening or weakening the Black population in those districts could spur litigation. Additionally, the “Fighting Ninth” district has been based in the southwestern corner of the state since Reconstruction. VA-9 needs to add population and is surrounded on three sides by other states: it will need to expand further east, it’s simply a question of where. VA-9 is bordered to the east by VA-6, a heavily Republican district that contains the Democratic city of Roanoke and the heavily Republican Shenandoah Valley, and VA-5, a Republican-leaning central/southern Virginia seat that has recently hosted some competitive races. Those districts are also underpopulated, so the next versions of each will have to move further north and/or east. The Northern Virginia districts are all overpopulated and will need to contract to some degree. VA-2 in Hampton Roads, held by Rep. Elaine Luria (D), is underpopulated, and it is hard to reconfigure the district as anything other than a swing seat, particularly given the likelihood that neighboring VA-3 and VA-4 aren’t likely to change much. About 60% of VA-2 comes from Virginia Beach, a Trump-to-Biden locality that has usually voted roughly five percentage points more Republican than Virginia as a whole in recent statewide races. VA-7, the Greater Richmond/central Virginia seat held by Rep. Abigail Spanberger (D), could be made either more or less Democratic. If Democrats were in charge of the process, they might have followed Interstate 64 to link the Richmond part of VA-7 with Democratic Charlottesville/Albemarle County — this would produce a blue-leaning seat. An iteration of this seat is possible, but Republicans will likely fight against it. VA-5, which currently covers Charlottesville, would become safely Republican if the city was moved into another district, but the district also could be reconfigured in such a way that it would remain competitive under the right circumstances. With a first-time commission process unfolding that potentially has a conservative-leaning backstop in the Supreme Court of Virginia, this is a hard process to handicap. Democrats likely will come out of this process with three safe seats in Northern Virginia and two in Richmond/Hampton Roads. Republicans should come out of it able to at least defend the four seats they hold now, although the trajectory of VA-1 and whether it becomes a swing seat, either through redistricting now or political changes later, will merit monitoring. Then it’s just a question of how the state’s two most competitive seats, Democratic-held VA-2 and VA-7, end up looking. If both remain marginal, Republicans should seriously be able to contest both, and redistricting could make their job easier in one or both seats. If Republicans are able to hold what they currently have and flip VA-2 and VA-7, Virginia will regain a commonality it recently shared with the rest of the classically-defined South: a Republican majority in its congressional delegation. ConclusionClearly, New York is by far the most important state in this group in terms of national House control. An aggressive Democratic gerrymander, if Democrats can pull it off, could help make up for Republican gerrymandering elsewhere. We don’t expect huge shifts based on redistricting in the region’s other states, although there are consequential choices to be made in several of them. We’ve now looked at all 44 states that have more than one congressional district. Next week, we’re going to summarize what we’ve written and offer an overall assessment of the redistricting picture as the remapping process begins in earnest following Labor Day. Read the fine printLearn more about the Crystal Ball and find out how to contact us here. Sign up to receive Crystal Ball e-mails like this one delivered straight to your inbox. Use caution with Sabato’s Crystal Ball, and remember: “He who lives by the Crystal Ball ends up eating ground glass!” |
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38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Biden to Go Back on Vacation, as Even His Own People Are Horrified Americans Left Behind
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
September 2, 2021 THE LATEST Surging interest in ivermectin — an antiparasitic drug with no proven ability to treat Covid-19 — is a dangerous public health hazard. The science is pretty clear, but that hasn’t stopped the ignorant and the desperate from attempting to take the drug, often at doses that we know are unsafe, writes Zeeshan Aleem.
But beyond the serious harm ivermectin can do at an individual level, the drug’s popularity highlights “a major source of our crisis: a decline in trust in any institutions or authorities outside one’s political or cultural in-group,” notes Aleem. “And that in turn suggests the issue isn’t teaching people science, but rebuilding the social bonds of our society.”
Read Zeeshan Aleem’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Thursday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES The audacity of Texas’ abortion law goes far beyond putting women in danger. Read More The FDA’s recent actions have brought a glaring issue within the agency to a critical boiling point. Read More A new video creates a problem for Ron Johnson. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC
The first two episodes of Southlake, a six-part original podcast series from NBC News, are now available. The new series, hosted by national investigative reporter Mike Hixenbaugh and news correspondent Antonia Hylton, takes listeners inside a wealthy Texas suburb’s war over race and education. Listen for free wherever you get your podcasts.
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. The same eyewitnesses return to the booth to reflect on the past two decades.
Follow MSNBC
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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47.) ABC
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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, SEPTEMBER 2, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Today we look at the landmark Supreme Court decision that could affect abortion rights across the country, plus the deadly chaos Ida has brought to New York and New Jersey.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Thursday morning. A divided Supreme Court late Wednesday declined to block a restrictive Texas law banning abortions after a baby’s heartbeat can be detected, in a blow to abortion rights nationally.
The vote, which was passed on a 5-4 majority, allows anyone in the U.S. to sue abortion providers or others who help women get an abortion after about six weeks into pregnancy.
Chief Justice John Roberts dissented alongside the three liberal Justices, who each wrote a separate opinion opposing the decision.
The lack of action by the nation’s high court deals a blow to Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 ruling that legalized abortion nationally.
Abortion rights advocates say the Texas measure is the most restrictive anti-abortion law to go into effect in the U.S. in years, with provisions that amount to a near-total ban on abortion in the state.
Read the full story here. Thursday’s Top Stories
At least eight people were killed as the remnants of Hurricane Ida battered New York and New Jersey with record rain and flooding that left both areas under states of emergency on Thursday. Meanwhile in Louisiana, residents who didn’t evacuate wait for power, water, communication to be restored. FEMA is set to announce sweeping changes to the way the U.S. government will verify homeownership for disaster relief applicants who lack legal documents for inherited property. Analysis: The president vowed to “turn the page” on U.S. overreach after Afghanistan. The page was already turning, writes NBC News’ Josh Lederman. OPINION Claiming her co-defendant made her do bad things pretty much requires admitting the bad things actually happened, writes Danny Cevallos, MSNBC legal analyst. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
INTO AMERICA PODCAST This week’s episode of Into America takes a dive into NBC’s new Southlake podcast. Trymaine Lee talks with Antonia Hylton and Mike Hixenbaugh about their reporting and how they were personally impacted it. Shopping
From air purifiers and face mask accessories to teeth whitening pens and SPF lip balms, here are the most purchased items we covered in August. One Fun Thing
Justin Bieber became an accidental model for Skims, Kim Kardashian’s undergarment line, thanks to an inadvertent mashup of billboards on Monday on the side of the Andaz hotel in West Hollywood, California.
The top half of Bieber’s Balenciaga ad with him in a leather jacket was seen above the bottom half of a model wearing Skims underwear and socks for a jarring look.
At least the sexy Skims version of Bieber gave people something to smile about while stuck in the Los Angeles traffic.
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: Big problems and petty politics sum up American politics over the past summer
If you had to describe American politics over this past summer, this might do the trick:
Big problems and petty politics.
Think about the big problems: Fires out in the West. A hurricane in the Southeast. Flooding in the East. A humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan. A deadly pandemic that’s not gone away. A surge of migrants at the border. Oh, and an attack on the U.S. Capitol – just eight months ago – as Congress was certifying election results.
Then match them with all the petty politics we’ve seen: A recall election in California (when that governor is already up for re-election next year and after previous failed attempts to recall him).
Congressional Democrats arguing about procedure over which legislative priority should come first – infrastructure or reconciliation/climate.
Republicans criticizing President Biden’s handling of Afghanistan, but not offering solutions how to fix the problem (when many of them also supported withdrawal during the last administration).
A Democratic president who spent half of a televised address explaining why it was time the United States withdrew from Afghanistan – and the other half defensively answering his critics.
Fights over mask and vaccine requirements.
The political opposition howling about the situation at the border – but not coming up with legislative solutions how to fix it.
And a House minority leader who helped sink a bipartisan investigation into what happened on Jan. 6, who then complained about it not being bipartisan and who now is threatening telecom companies if they cooperate with the Democratic investigation.
Photo by Jon Cherryg/Getty Images
There have been plenty of heroes this past summer – those who helped with the evacuation from Afghanistan, the 13 U.S. servicemembers who lost their lives, the first responders battling the fires and floods.
Unfortunately, there haven’t been many heroes to be found in our politics.
It’s hard to find anyone speaking to the moment this country is facing.
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Poll: 92 percent of college freshmen are optimistic about their live
But for all of that pessimism, here’s some optimism you can use: The Class of 2025 that just started college is optimistic about their lives and job prospects, according to a new NBC News/Generation Lab poll of incoming college students across the country.
A whopping 92 percent of the freshmen — attending either two-year or four-year institutions — say they’re optimistic about their personal lives, including 28 percent who are “super” optimistic, according to the online NBC News/Generation Lab poll of 1,108 incoming students conducted Aug. 18-19 nationwide.
Another 92 percent think they’ll get the job they want after they graduate, 88 percent definitely or probably plan to get married, and nearly 4 in 5 plan to have children.
“I’m super optimistic about my life because, if I can go to college and have all these opportunities in the midst of a pandemic, I don’t think that there’s much that can stop me,” said Kelsi VanOrder, 17, who’s attending Grand Rapids Community College in Michigan.
Lauryn Cook, 35, who’s attending Daytona State College in Florida, is also optimistic “because I have all the right things happening for me,” she said. “I’m going to college so that I can better my life and the quality of life for my children. I am in a relationship with someone who supports me, and that’s amazing.”
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
9: The number of deaths reported in the New York City area so far after flash flooding and heavy storms yesterday.
3: The number of studies that found that the risk of breakthrough Covid-19 infections remains very rare.
11,500: The number of people in New Orleans whose power returned as about a million remain without power.
51 percent: The portion of first-time voters in the 2020 election who use YouTube every day.
39,533,311: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 195,925 more since yesterday morning.)
645,894: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,694 more since yesterday morning).
371,280,129: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 1,068,102 more since yesterday morning.)
52.6 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
63.6 percent: The share of all U.S. adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: Supreme Court makes it official
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Happy Labor Day
A note that our newsletter will be off on Friday and Monday – but back bright and early Tuesday morning. Have a happy and safe Labor Day weekend.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The new Texas abortion law could make abortion a major issue in upcoming elections.
Democrats have named Rep. Liz Cheney the vice chairwoman of the Jan. 6 panel.
FEMA closes the gap that prevented many Black families in South from receiving disaster aid.
More federal Covid-related unemployment programs are set to expire within days.
Colorado police and paramedics face charges in the death of Elijah McClain
States and Washington D.C. want to appeal the Purdue Pharma bankruptcy plan.
Former President Trump made two more endorsements yesterday, one in the PA Senate race and one who challenging a Republican who voted for impeachment.
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Handing over weapons to one’s enemy is not ideal. Yet due to the nature of the United States’ withdrawal from Afghanistan, the USA did just that. I guess I shouldn’t say the “USA” there. Since … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
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57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
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60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Thursday, Sept. 2, and we’re covering Hurricane Ida’s trail of destruction, the Taliban’s pivot to governing, and more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWBreaking: New York issued a state of emergency overnight and New York City had its first-ever flash flood warning issued as the remnants of Hurricane Ida moved through the region. See footage here. Taliban To Name LeaderThe Taliban are expected to name Sheikh Haibatullah Akhundzada as the country’s leader, according to reports (paywall, NYT). Rarely in the public eye, Akhundzada has acted as the group’s supreme religious authority since 2016, when his predecessor, Akhtar Mansour, was killed in a drone strike. He also oversaw the Taliban’s strict Sharia law-based court system during the group’s first stint in power from 1996 to 2001. Akhundzada has survived at least two assassination attempts in recent years, including a 2019 bombing by a Taliban rebel faction that killed a number of his relatives. His elevation comes as the extremist group turns from guerilla warfare toward the challenge of governing a country of 38 million people (see previous write-up). In related news, the Taliban stepped up their offensive on the country’s last remaining pocket of resistance in the Panjshir valley. Elijah McClain Three Colorado police officers and two paramedics were charged yesterday in the 2019 death of Elijah McClain. The 32-count indictment was handed down by a grand jury almost exactly two years after the 23-year-old massage therapist died while being restrained by police. McClain, who was Black, was stopped by police while walking down the street in the city of Aurora after a resident reported a suspicious individual. According to police, McClain resisted arrest and the encounter ended with officers applying a chokehold and administering the sedative Ketamine, claiming McClain was in a state of excited delirium. McClain suffered cardiac arrest and died in the hospital six days later. See partial body camera footage from the stop here (warning: sensitive content). Local officials declined to press charges, but Gov. Jared Polis (D) appointed a special prosecutor to review the case. Each defendant will face felony charges of manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide. Texas Heartbeat ActA Texas law went into effect yesterday banning most abortions after six weeks of pregnancy. The law bans abortions after the detection of a fetal heartbeat becomes possible—generally around six weeks after conception, often before many women know they are pregnant. Estimates suggest 85% of annual abortions in Texas would be prohibited under the rules. The law makes exceptions only for serious health impacts to the mother. At least 12 other states have enacted bans on abortion early in pregnancy, each blocked by a court challenge. However, the Texas bill relies on a unique enforcement structure—private citizens, rather than public officials, may sue providers and anyone assisting in an unauthorized abortion. A successful suit would net the reporting party up to $10K. Overnight, the Supreme Court declined in a 5-4 vote to block the law while a challenge works its way through lower courts. The high court is expected to tackle a similar challenge to a Mississippi abortion law this fall. We’re celebrating our fourth birthday this week! Thanks to all of you who have helped us grow to nearly 1 million readers. In partnership with The Motley FoolOOPS, THEY DID IT AGAINThe Motley Fool has developed a bit of a reputation. Their service recommends companies with incredibly high growth potential and excellent leadership, then hold long term to achieve maximum returns. We’ll let the numbers speak for themselves: > Amazon, recommended at $15.31/share (up 21,492%) If you look closely, there are two common threads with all of the above: low share prices and phenomenal returns. Though not all of their returns have performed this well, The Motley Fool has done it again. They’ve compiled a list titled “5 Growth Stocks Under $49.” The best part? You can read it for free today. Returns as of 8/25/2021 Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & CultureBrought to you by Vuori Clothing > Qualifying for the 2022 World Cup resumes; US men’s national team takes on El Salvador tonight (10 pm ET, CBS Sports Network) (More) | Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo breaks international scoring record with 110 career goals (More) > Joe Rogan, host of Spotify’s most-streamed podcast and a past vaccine skeptic, announces he has COVID-19 (More) | NBA to enforce local vaccine requirements for players of teams based in New York City and San Francisco (More) > “Seinfeld’s” full library of 180 episodes to be released on Netflix Oct. 1; the streaming service paid $500M for global rights to the series (More) From our partners: Wear this on the weekends. Or at work, at the gym, or in the bar. We don’t care where you wear them—just that you check out Vuori’s men’s Sunday Performance Joggers. With new colors like black camo and tobacco heather, they’re a fresh take on athleisure that you’ll never want to take off. Explore the Sunday Performance Joggers—along with other men’s and women’s styles—with 20% off your first Vuori order today. Science & Technology> Scientists quantify the wave-particle duality of light for the first time; study links the degree to which light acts, more like a wave or more like a particle, to its source (More) | One of nature’s biggest mysteries; how photons can be both waves and particles at the same time (More, w/video) > Researchers create a molecular computer that can be physically reconfigured on the fly, mimicking the brain plasticity or the ability of the brain to reorganize its neural structure (More) > Archaeologists reconstruct early human migration patterns through the Arabian Peninsula, finding recurring bouts of heavy rainfall made it a desirable route as human ancestors dispersed from Africa and Eurasia (More) Business & Markets> Federal judge conditionally approves $10B bankruptcy plan for Oxycontin maker Purdue Pharma for its role in the opioid crisis; owners, the Sackler family, will relinquish ownership and contribute $4.5B to plan, but will be shielded from any future lawsuits (More) > Amazon plans to hire 55,000 new employees globally in corporate and technology roles (More) > Meet the promising startups from Y Combinator’s Summer Demo Days (Day One, Day Two) | Y Combinator 101, the world’s leading startup accelerator (More) Politics & World Affairs> Nearly 1 million remain without power across Louisiana and Mississippi, and roughly 600,000 without water, four days after Hurricane Ida (More) | One dead, one missing in Washington, DC, suburbs as Ida triggers widespread flooding (More) > One US service member rescued, five others missing after Navy helicopter crash about 60 miles off the coast of San Diego, California (More) > India locks down disputed Kashmir region after the death of top separatist leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani; Geelani died of natural causes at age 92 (More) IN-DEPTHThe Girl in the PictureAtavist | Nile Cappello. More than two decades after the murder of Aundria Bowman, a grieving mother and a sketch artist revisit the cold case—and learn the terrible truth. (Read) The Legend of Ray CaldwellESPN | Ryan Hockensmith. During a balmy late summer baseball game in 1919, Cleveland Indians pitcher Ray Caldwell was struck by lightning while on the mound. He not only survived, but lived to finish the game. (Read) WORDS TO INVEST BYIn partnership with The Motley Fool “Buy low, sell high.” It’s a wonderful mantra for investment, but easier said than done … right?? Well, The Motley Fool wants to help you live a smarter, happier, and richer life. How, you ask? Today, they’re offering all 1440 readers a free report titled “5 Growth Stocks Under $49.” It’s a list of what they believe are the most promising—and affordable—to add to your portfolio today. Read the report now, no purchase necessary. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAHurricane Ida’s devastation captured in before and after images. … and there’s a dolphin swimming in a flooded Louisiana neighborhood. Swimming cheetahs top the best wildlife photos of the year. Charting 2021’s highest-paid athletes. Dogs know whether you’re intentional or just forgetful. Record-breaking limbo roller skating. (w/video) Human babies laugh like great apes. The story behind the Banksy NFT scam. Clickbait: Miracle shark has a virgin birth. Historybook: US Treasury Department is founded (1789); Japan surrenders, ending World War II (1945); Astronaut and teacher Christa McAuliffe born (1948); HBD Keanu Reeves (1964); Vietnamese president and revolutionary Ho Chi Minh dies (1969). “May your future be limited only by your dreams.” – Christa McAuliffe Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com. Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here! |
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
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66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell has been paying a steep price for promoting his belief that the 2020 presidential election had issues with it that caused Joe Biden to win unfairly.
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TOP STORIES:
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Democrats Furious After They Get a Smackdown From the Supreme Court
- Biden Adviser Gives Mind-Blowing Response When Asked If Taliban Are America’s Enemies
- Omar Accused Of Committing ‘A Felony With Penalties Up To 5 Years In Prison’
- Biden Smacked With Brutal Poll, And It’s Even Worse for Kamala Harris
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Mike Lindell Hit Hard — Paying Price For Supporting Trump
- Democrats Make Sick Move Against 13 Dead Service Members
- Dems Could Lose Senate Seat In Crucial Battleground State
- Two Senior FDA Officials Resign Over Vaccine Dispute With Biden Admin
- US Military Had Chance To Take Out Afghan Suicide Bomber… Biden Admin Stopped
- BOMBSHELL: BIDEN KNEW, PHONE CALL LEAKED! IMPEACH HIM NOW
- ALERT: US Congressman Missing In Afghanistan! on ‘Rogue Evacuation Mission’
- Biden Administration Begins Shredding Evidence…
- After 13 US Servicemembers Killed, Biden Leaves White House For Getaway
- Three Year Old American Child Left Behind In Afghanistan
- Top Ally To Donald Trump Smears Him, Calls It Quits While Gushing Over Biden
- Lawyer for Jan 6 Defendants Goes Missing After Accusing FBI, Phones Disabled…
- U.S. ‘Negotiated A Secret Arrangement With The Taliban’
- Florida Man charged with $25 Million extortion plot targeting Matt Gaetz…
- Impeachment News: Joe Biden Learns His Fate
- “25% increase in deaths of people who are FULLY Vaccinated”
- BIDEN: 13 Dead US Service Members and Stranded Americans an “Extraordinary Success” (VIDEO)
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IN DEPTH:
- Two Senior FDA Officials Resign Over Vaccine Dispute With Biden Admin 24 seconds
- Biden to visit Ida-ravaged Louisiana Friday 21 mins
- Bombshell Report: US Knew About Kabul Bomber, Had Drone Lock but Didn’t Take the Shot 46 mins
- Biden State Department abandoned 600 of Its Own in Afghanistan 1 hour
- Biden slams Texas six-week abortion ban: ‘Blatantly violates’ constitutional rights 2 hours
- Top Biden adviser refuses to say whether Taliban is an enemy of the US: ‘Hard to put a label on it’ 3 hours
- CDC tells the unvaccinated ‘DON’T travel over Labor Day weekend’ 3 hours
- Three Year Old American Child Left Behind In Afghanistan 3 hours
- Afghan refugees highlight issues with workforce credentialism 3 hours
- Taliban Taunt Joe Biden with Mock US Funeral in Streets of Kabul (VIDEO) 18 mins
- Lawyer for Jan 6 Defendants Goes Missing After Accusing FBI, Phones Disabled… 36 mins
- Florida Man charged with $25 Million extortion plot targeting Matt Gaetz… 42 mins
- Red Cross Vaccine Alert — You Gotta Hear This 50 mins
- How Biden’s corporate tax hike would hit small businesses 56 mins
- “25% increase in deaths of people who are FULLY Vaccinated” 59 mins
- BOMBSHELL: BIDEN KNEW, PHONE CALL LEAKED! IMPEACH HIM NOW 1 hour
- Family Blown Up by Joe Biden’s Missile Strike Had Special Visas and Were About to Leave Afghanistan 2 hours
- Roughly 43,000 absentee ballot counted in DeKalb County in 2020 violated chain of custody rule 2 hours
- Are China and Russia Trying to Attack the Law of the Sea? 2 hours
- Can the U.S. Military Build an Army for a Foreign Country? Here Is What History Says. 3 hours
- The Navy’s Columbia-class Submarine Will Break All of the Records 3 hours
- 6 Naval Task Groups From U.S., U.K., India, Japan and Australia Underway in Pacific — USNI News 3 hours
- Biden’s Afghanistan fiasco is a disaster for Asia 3 hours
- Mistake: Joe Biden Wants to ‘Talk’ and ‘Engage’ with China 3 hours
- Taliban: ‘It Is Expected’ China Will Support Us 3 hours
- WATCH: National Security Advisor lays out plans for providing aid to Taliban-led Afghanistan 3 hours
- U.S. adds Canada to ‘reconsider travel’ advisory list amid COVID-19 3 hours
- Morning Joe Grills Biden Flack: You Left People Behind to Taliban ‘Medieval Cult’ 3 hours
- Canada Agrees to Take In 5,000 Afghan Refugees Evacuated by U.S. 3 hours
- Taliban Puts on Fireworks Show After U.S. Departure 3 hours
- Tigray Forces Raided Aid Warehouses in Ethiopia’s Amhara Region, Says U.S. Agency 3 hours
- If We Soak the Rich, Will Everyone Get Wet?, by Stephen Moore 3 hours
- Texas 6‑week abortion ban takes effect, with high court mum 3 hours
- The Restorative Power of the American People 3 hours
- Bono, Susan Rice Gush over Anthony Fauci in First Trailer for Nat Geo Documentary 3 hours
- Mike Richards fired as ‘Jeopardy!’ executive producer after host debacle 3 hours
- Kiss’ Gene Simmons tests positive for COVID-19, tour postponed 3 hours
- Tyrese Gibson reveals why he lost film roles to Terrence Howard 3 hours
- Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson reacts to his doppelganger cop: ‘Stay safe brother and thank you for your service’ 3 hours
- Britney Spears’ Attorney Accuses Father of ‘Extorting’ $2 Million to Step Down 3 hours
- Patriots shockingly release Cam Newton, make Mac Jones starter 3 hours
- NYT: Number of green-card Americans stranded in Afghanistan could be in the thousands; WaPo: “Moral disaster” 3 hours
- Steelers’ Chase Claypool, Minkah Fitzpatrick involved in practice fight: reports 3 hours
- Drew Brees’ touching message dedicated to Louisiana during Hurricane Ida: ‘My heart is with you’ 3 hours
- Thumbs-up! Javier Baez, Mets rally for comeback win after fan drama 3 hours
- Armando Salguero: NFL Still Segregating The Unvaccinated In Adjusted COVID Protocols 3 hours
- Ohio State Freshman QB Quinn Ewers Signs $1.4 Million NIL Deal 3 hours
- Three Colts Starters Now On The Reserve/COVID-19 List 3 hours
- Yankees still searching for Derek Jeter’s long-term replacement at shortstop 3 hours
- Republicans Press to Hold Biden Accountable for Afghan Withdrawal 3 hours
- Fairfax Teachers Win $32.7 Million Bonus for ‘Extraordinary’ Work During Pandemic — Washington Free Beacon 3 hours
- Stanford Study: More Businesses Have Already Fled California This Year Than in All of 2020 | Brad Polumbo 4 hours
- Stanford Study: More Businesses Have Already Fled California This Year Than in All of 2020 | Brad Polumbo 4 hours
- Senators urge Yellen to keep $9 billion in assets from Taliban 4 hours
- OPEC drama threatens oil production promises 4 hours
- Cancel campaigns against faculty skyrocket in 2020, usually get them punished: FIRE study 4 hours
- Joe Biden’s Next ‘Stimulus Check’ Is Coming in Two Weeks 4 hours
- Health firm that donated big to Biden, Dems pays $90 million for allegedly bilking Medicare 4 hours
- Consumer confidence tumbles to lowest level since February 4 hours
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The lowest of all lows, when will they stop!?
|
TOP STORIES:
-
Democrats Make Sick Move Against 13 Dead Service Members
- Dems Could Lose Senate Seat In Crucial Battleground State
- Two Senior FDA Officials Resign Over Vaccine Dispute With Biden Admin
- US Military Had Chance To Take Out Afghan Suicide Bomber… Biden Admin Stopped
-
BOMBSHELL: BIDEN KNEW, PHONE CALL LEAKED! IMPEACH HIM NOW
-
ALERT: US Congressman Missing In Afghanistan! on ‘Rogue Evacuation Mission’
- Biden Administration Begins Shredding Evidence…
- After 13 US Servicemembers Killed, Biden Leaves White House For Getaway
- Three Year Old American Child Left Behind In Afghanistan
-
Top Ally To Donald Trump Smears Him, Calls It Quits While Gushing Over Biden
-
Lawyer for Jan 6 Defendants Goes Missing After Accusing FBI, Phones Disabled…
- U.S. ‘Negotiated A Secret Arrangement With The Taliban’
- Florida Man charged with $25 Million extortion plot targeting Matt Gaetz…
- Impeachment News: Joe Biden Learns His Fate
-
“25% increase in deaths of people who are FULLY Vaccinated”
- BIDEN: 13 Dead US Service Members and Stranded Americans an “Extraordinary Success” (VIDEO)
|
IN DEPTH:
- Two Senior FDA Officials Resign Over Vaccine Dispute With Biden Admin 24 seconds
- Biden to visit Ida-ravaged Louisiana Friday 21 mins
- Bombshell Report: US Knew About Kabul Bomber, Had Drone Lock but Didn’t Take the Shot 46 mins
- Biden State Department abandoned 600 of Its Own in Afghanistan 1 hour
- Biden slams Texas six-week abortion ban: ‘Blatantly violates’ constitutional rights 2 hours
- Top Biden adviser refuses to say whether Taliban is an enemy of the US: ‘Hard to put a label on it’ 3 hours
- CDC tells the unvaccinated ‘DON’T travel over Labor Day weekend’ 3 hours
- Three Year Old American Child Left Behind In Afghanistan 3 hours
- Afghan refugees highlight issues with workforce credentialism 3 hours
-
Taliban Taunt Joe Biden with Mock US Funeral in Streets of Kabul (VIDEO) 18 mins
- Lawyer for Jan 6 Defendants Goes Missing After Accusing FBI, Phones Disabled… 36 mins
- Florida Man charged with $25 Million extortion plot targeting Matt Gaetz… 42 mins
-
Red Cross Vaccine Alert — You Gotta Hear This 50 mins
- How Biden’s corporate tax hike would hit small businesses 56 mins
- “25% increase in deaths of people who are FULLY Vaccinated” 59 mins
- BOMBSHELL: BIDEN KNEW, PHONE CALL LEAKED! IMPEACH HIM NOW 1 hour
- Family Blown Up by Joe Biden’s Missile Strike Had Special Visas and Were About to Leave Afghanistan 2 hours
- Roughly 43,000 absentee ballot counted in DeKalb County in 2020 violated chain of custody rule 2 hours
- Are China and Russia Trying to Attack the Law of the Sea? 2 hours
- Can the U.S. Military Build an Army for a Foreign Country? Here Is What History Says. 3 hours
- The Navy’s Columbia-class Submarine Will Break All of the Records 3 hours
- 6 Naval Task Groups From U.S., U.K., India, Japan and Australia Underway in Pacific — USNI News 3 hours
- Biden’s Afghanistan fiasco is a disaster for Asia 3 hours
- Mistake: Joe Biden Wants to ‘Talk’ and ‘Engage’ with China 3 hours
- Taliban: ‘It Is Expected’ China Will Support Us 3 hours
- WATCH: National Security Advisor lays out plans for providing aid to Taliban-led Afghanistan 3 hours
- U.S. adds Canada to ‘reconsider travel’ advisory list amid COVID-19 3 hours
- Morning Joe Grills Biden Flack: You Left People Behind to Taliban ‘Medieval Cult’ 3 hours
- Canada Agrees to Take In 5,000 Afghan Refugees Evacuated by U.S. 3 hours
- Taliban Puts on Fireworks Show After U.S. Departure 3 hours
- Tigray Forces Raided Aid Warehouses in Ethiopia’s Amhara Region, Says U.S. Agency 3 hours
- If We Soak the Rich, Will Everyone Get Wet?, by Stephen Moore 3 hours
- Texas 6‑week abortion ban takes effect, with high court mum 3 hours
- The Restorative Power of the American People 3 hours
- Bono, Susan Rice Gush over Anthony Fauci in First Trailer for Nat Geo Documentary 3 hours
- Mike Richards fired as ‘Jeopardy!’ executive producer after host debacle 3 hours
- Kiss’ Gene Simmons tests positive for COVID-19, tour postponed 3 hours
- Tyrese Gibson reveals why he lost film roles to Terrence Howard 3 hours
- Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson reacts to his doppelganger cop: ‘Stay safe brother and thank you for your service’ 3 hours
- Britney Spears’ Attorney Accuses Father of ‘Extorting’ $2 Million to Step Down 3 hours
- Patriots shockingly release Cam Newton, make Mac Jones starter 3 hours
- NYT: Number of green-card Americans stranded in Afghanistan could be in the thousands; WaPo: “Moral disaster” 3 hours
- Steelers’ Chase Claypool, Minkah Fitzpatrick involved in practice fight: reports 3 hours
- Drew Brees’ touching message dedicated to Louisiana during Hurricane Ida: ‘My heart is with you’ 3 hours
- Thumbs-up! Javier Baez, Mets rally for comeback win after fan drama 3 hours
- Armando Salguero: NFL Still Segregating The Unvaccinated In Adjusted COVID Protocols 3 hours
- Ohio State Freshman QB Quinn Ewers Signs $1.4 Million NIL Deal 3 hours
- Three Colts Starters Now On The Reserve/COVID-19 List 3 hours
- Yankees still searching for Derek Jeter’s long-term replacement at shortstop 3 hours
- Republicans Press to Hold Biden Accountable for Afghan Withdrawal 3 hours
- Fairfax Teachers Win $32.7 Million Bonus for ‘Extraordinary’ Work During Pandemic — Washington Free Beacon 3 hours
- Stanford Study: More Businesses Have Already Fled California This Year Than in All of 2020 | Brad Polumbo 4 hours
- Stanford Study: More Businesses Have Already Fled California This Year Than in All of 2020 | Brad Polumbo 4 hours
- Senators urge Yellen to keep $9 billion in assets from Taliban 4 hours
- OPEC drama threatens oil production promises 4 hours
- Cancel campaigns against faculty skyrocket in 2020, usually get them punished: FIRE study 4 hours
- Joe Biden’s Next ‘Stimulus Check’ Is Coming in Two Weeks 4 hours
- Health firm that donated big to Biden, Dems pays $90 million for allegedly bilking Medicare 4 hours
- Consumer confidence tumbles to lowest level since February 4 hours
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Sept. 2, 2021 Welcome to the Thursday edition of Internet Insider, where we explore identities online and off. Today:
BREAK THE INTERNET Sexual assault protests burgeon into an anti-Greek life movement online Last week, sophomore University of Nebraska-Lincoln student Will Green went from being what he described as “just a typical teenager on TikTok” to the catalyst of a viral spotlight on protests against a local fraternity and Greek life at large.
On Aug. 24, Green posted a video of hundreds of students chanting “rot in hell” in front of the house belonging to the local chapter of Phi Gamma Delta, aka Fiji. Green’s video was taken less than 24 hours after a rape was reported to have taken place at 3:47am at the Fiji house.
The video received 30,000 likes overnight. On Wednesday, it had been viewed 2.1 million times and sparked condemnation of Greek life and rape culture on TikTok.
A TikTok posted on Aug. 25 by Lauren Patton, another sophomore at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, details the severity of the alleged assault on the student, who many are saying is a freshman. Patton’s video has 1.8 million views.
“My roommate just got home because on her walk back around 3 she saw a girl sobbing in the green space and she had been raped at Fiji,” begins a testimony that Patton screenshot from a social media post with specific names of students crossed out. “[She] literally had to be taken to the hospital for a rape kit.”
The protests continued for multiple nights after the assault and only grew in numbers.
“But even that first turnout was a lot more than people had anticipated,” said Green, who also noted that students were committed to making sure there was a spotlight on the university as it responded to the assault. The admin of @shutdownfiji, an Instagram account that now has over 31,000 followers, had that same goal in mind. (BuzzFeed News identified the admin as sophomore Rose Felice.) “I realized it would be a great platform for people to know about what has been going on behind the scenes and has been purposely hidden by admin for years at UNL’s campus and institutions across the U.S.,” Felice told the Daily Dot via Instagram direct message.
Patton told the Daily Dot in an email that the screenshot image spread quickly across campus, and Green said that news and details about the student-run protests “spread like wildfire” over text and on social media. Green said there’s an understanding on campus that Fiji is the “epitome of toxic masculinity”: The fraternity’s UNL chapter was suspended in 2017 after members harassed attendees of the Women’s March in January of that same year. Fiji’s suspension was lifted in 2019, according to the Daily Nebraskan, a student-run newspaper. Online, many are posting about abolishing Greek life as a whole.
“People wonder why the Abolish Greek Life movement is a thing,” tweeted @aewall14, “yet around the nation, there are chapters just like UNL FIJI getting away with disgusting and heartbreaking actions without the blink of an eye.”
Read the full story here. Contributing Writer
SPONSORED Learn how to care for our world from one of the greatest conservationists of all time
Jane Goodall is known for her fascination with wildlife as well as the remarkable bond she forged with chimpanzees. The anthropologist has devoted more than 60 years of her life to conservation. In her MasterClass, she shares the story of her journey as well as all the things she’s learned along the way about how to preserve our planet.
FROM OUR FRIENDS AT NAUTILUS How some teachers feel about the lack of mask mandates in their states Around the U.S., schools are making the shift from remote learning to in-person instruction. Many are relieved to exit the confines of their pandemic bubbles, but COVID numbers are on the rise among kids, and some states continue to avoid mask mandates among teachers and students. This fact may leave some of the adults who are tasked to work closely with unvaccinated students rightfully troubled over the prospect of widespread COVID-19 transmission. Mask mandates are generally left to local governments to institute, but a number of states including Arkansas, Florida, Iowa, Montana, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas have reportedly employed executive action to prevent school districts from issuing mask protocols. This is leaving teachers struggling to reconcile their responsibility to keep the kids they teach safe with the fact that it’s technically against the law for them to implement mask mandates among students. “I teach in Oklahoma where it is now illegal for schools to mandate masks or vaccination,” a fifth-grade teacher who responded to a request for anonymous feedback told CNN. “My biggest concern this year is that there is a real possibility one of my fifth graders could die from COVID-19 and I can’t do anything to protect them because it is against the law.” In Texas, many school districts are reportedly following Gov. Greg Abbott’s order to make masks optional in school, despite record numbers of children contracting the virus and requiring hospitalization. “There are over 3,000 students at my high school. There will not be three feet between anybody at any given time. How fast do you think the delta variant will travel within that population?” a Houston teacher told CNN. A slew of school districts across Texas are now going against Abbott’s order, and the federal government is backing them up. “Unfortunately, as you’ve seen throughout this pandemic, some politicians are trying to turn public safety measures—that is, children wearing masks in school—into political disputes for their own political gain,” President Joe Biden said on Aug. 18. “We are not going to sit by as governors try to block and intimidate educators protecting our children.”
SELF-CARE Recipe: Nut butter smoothie I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: I’m not a morning person. But after a life-long battle with breakfast, I’ve found that a smoothie helps make waking up a little sweeter. My latest obsession is a recipe that gets my caffeine and morning protein all in one. Like everything I make, it’s a common internet recipe refined to my liking. Nut butter oat smoothies (with coffee!) taste pretty close to a Reese’s milkshake, and if you skip the collagen powder, they’re totally vegan. Nut butter oat smoothie:
Now Playing: 🎶 “Re: Future” – Boyfriend 🎶
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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 09.02.21 A suspect is in custody after a shooting left one student dead in North Carolina. It was the second shooting in three days at a high school in the state. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Taliban forces celebrate the withdrawal of US forces in Kandahar on Wednesday. (Javed Tanveer/AFP/Getty Images) Afghanistan
The Taliban threw a parade in Afghanistan’s second-largest city to show off their newly seized American-made military equipment. In videos posted on social media, the militants displayed the hardware left behind by Afghan and US forces after the withdrawal of the last American troops. Fighters waved white Taliban flags from Humvees and armored vehicles while others dressed in US-style uniforms posed for photos in the cockpits of helicopters. Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said he wasn’t concerned about the images because the US had deactivated all the gear abandoned at the airport. “They can inspect all they want … They can look at them … but they can’t fly them. They can’t operate them,” he said.
Ida
Days after Hurricane Ida tore through Louisiana, its remnants are on a deadly path of destruction in the Northeast. At least eight people died in storm-related incidents in New York and New Jersey, authorities said, after Ida’s potent remnants spawned tornadoes and drenched the region with heavy rains. Drivers abandoned cars as flood waters turned streets into wading pools. New York City issued its first-ever flash flood emergency and suspended subway lines due to rising waters. Flash flood emergencies stretched for 190 miles from west of Philadelphia through New York City. Ida smashed into Louisiana as a Category 4 storm on Sunday, leaving more than 1 million customers without power and killing at least two people. Texas
A new weapons law that went into effect this month in Texas will make it harder for police officers to protect the public from gun violence, experts say. Under the law, most residents who legally own a firearm can carry it openly without a permit or training. The controversial “constitutional carry” law is the latest in a series of pro-gun bills passed by state lawmakers this year as gun violence incidents rise in Texas and nationwide. The number of shootings in Texas increased 14% this year compared to the same period in 2020. Republican supporters argued that by removing the licensing requirement, they are removing an “artificial barrier” to residents’ right to bear arms under the Constitution. But Andrew Karwoski, a policy expert at Everytown for Gun Safety, said: “Just allowing almost anyone to carry a handgun in public, no questions asked, no background check or safety training, is really dangerous.” Elijah McClain
A Colorado grand jury indicted three officers and two paramedics in the death of Elijah McClain, a young Black man who was placed in a chokehold and given a sedative. McClain, 23, was stopped by police while walking home from a store in August 2019 in an incident that ended with him in a carotid hold and then injected with ketamine, authorities said. The officers and paramedics each face a charge of manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide, and additional assault charges. Shortly after the incident, a district attorney declined to bring criminal charges, citing lack of evidence to prove the officers caused McClain’s death. After protests in Aurora and an online petition, Gov. Jared Polis announced a re-examination of the case last year. Coronavirus
There’s a dramatic rise in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations due to the Delta variant, and it’s affecting all age groups. More than 500,000 children tested positive for the virus within three weeks in the US last month, sparking more concerns about in-person learning. With vaccination rates low among eligible adolescents, health experts urged mask mandates as the most effective tool in controlling infections. “The virus is raging in all these children who are unvaccinated … They have no other protection. They’re literally sitting ducks,” CNN medical analyst Dr. Jonathan Reiner said. The US Food and Drug Administration must approve or authorize the vaccines in younger children first, and clinical trials for those under 12 are ongoing. Sponsor Content by LendingTree Lock in a 1.89% APR Refinance Rate Before The Fed Meets Economists are urging Americans to refinance to take advantage of historically low refinance rates. These low rates are not going to last much longer.
People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. A giant Triceratops fossil could soon belong to a dinosaur enthusiast. Or anyone who likes massive, ancient skeletons and has $1.4 million to spare.
Say hello to the spotted, handstanding acrobats of the skunk world! Stinky as they are, not all skunks are created equal.
Pearl Milling Co. unveiled a new ad this week. Sounds like the same ol’ Aunt Jemima taste — but with a different name.
The good news is Amtrak might add more than 50 new routes. The bad news: They still won’t be as fast as driving.
Actor Stephen Amell finally explained what really happened during that ‘shameful’ flight incident in June. 124,000 The number of civilians the US and its allies evacuated from Afghanistan, according to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin. Nothing will bring back my son, but I am thankful that his killers will finally be held accountable.
LaWayne Mosely, after a grand jury indicted police officers and paramedics in the 2019 death of his son, Elijah McClain. Brought to you by CNN Underscored 20 Amazon products our readers were obsessed with in August This month saw readers buying products to soak up warm summer nights while they still can, declutter their home offices and finally stop losing their keys. From grill brushes to pocket-size chargers, here are the items Underscored readers loved most in August. The shark whisperer 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 |
- When you’ve lost part of the New York Times. . .
- Poll: 52 percent say Biden should resign over Afghanistan
- Biden Tried to Fake It, Failed
- The 10 [make that 2] percent solution
- The Geek in Pictures: Poll Position Edition
When you’ve lost part of the New York Times. . .
Posted: 01 Sep 2021 11:21 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)My friend who is keeping me apprised of the New York Times’ coverage of the Afghanistan debacle detects what strike me as moods swings when it comes to the treatment of Joe Biden. To criticize or to coverup, that is the question. The Times seems to be doing both, depending to some degree whether seasoned reporters or folks from the editorial section are doing the writing. My friend reports: Between Biden’s speech and the completion of the pull-out, NYT’s coverage of Afghanistan is even more extensive today than it’s been in recent weeks. Overall, the Times is pretty tough on Biden. It does not take his speech at face value but points as politely as possible to a number of the president’s contradictions and misrepresentations. There does seem to be some tension, however, between an editorial faction that would like to protect Biden and plump for recognition of the Taliban, an open-door policy for refugees, etc., on the one hand, and, on the other, long-time reporters on the foreign beat who understand Biden’s flaws, his precarious political situation, and the viewpoint of the president’s critics. Biden skepticism comes through most clearly in the cover story on the president’s speech, and in a news analysis by Peter Baker. Baker’s piece is not typical NYT fare. It quotes extensively from Republican critics, highlights Biden’s broken promise on Americans left behind, and takes us on a tour of Biden’s shifting and contradictory account of his policy. A competing news analysis piece by Max Fisher (this one, unlike Baker’s, is on the front page) makes the case that the “U.S. and Taliban need each other.” This echoes the argument of an Op-Ed the other day by a member of the Times editorial board. It’s a fascinating and useful piece that lays out some of the competing imperatives now facing America in the region. Yet in considering the Taliban’s leverage over America, it makes no mention of the stranded Americans. Nor is there anything on the military resistance to the Taliban now centered in the Panjshir Valley, although that resistance is mentioned in one of the news accounts. In this piece, potential critics of recognizing the Taliban loom as crude and annoying obstacles to wise policy. There is definitely more focus than usual today on the plight of stranded Americans. For the first time, an entire story is dedicated to the issue. The human interest story at the center of this article is about a legal permanent resident, rather than an American citizen. Yet the status of stranded American citizens is mentioned repeatedly, and Republicans who decry abandoning citizens “behind enemy lines” are quoted. On the other hand, neither here nor anywhere else does the Times raise the possibility that Americans still caught in Afghanistan might be turned into hostages. For the most part, the Times takes the minimalist numerical estimates provided by the State Department at face value. At one point, however, the Times does say, “at least” hundreds of U.S. citizens are “stranded” in Afghanistan. That “at least” implies a bit of skepticism. And yes, NYT does call our citizens left behind “stranded.” What about the story, discussed by John Hinderaker below, of Joe Biden’s call in which he urged Afghanistan’s president to pretend the war against the Taliban was going well? Of this, my friend says: Yesterday’s big exclusive from Reuters showing that President Biden knew the Afghan army was collapsing, yet did nothing to modify his withdrawal plans accordingly, goes unmentioned in today’s print edition of the Times. Is this because the Reuters story came too late for inclusion? It’s hard to tell. The Reuters report presents a significant challenge for tomorrow’s edition of the Times. Indeed. Stay tuned.
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Poll: 52 percent say Biden should resign over Afghanistan
Posted: 01 Sep 2021 10:01 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)It’s just one poll and the result may not hold as Afghanistan recedes from our consciousness, but the result is still noteworthy. A Rasmussen survey, conducted on August 30-31 among 1,000 “likely voters,” finds that 52 percent believe Joe Biden should resign because of his Afghanistan policy. 39 percent disagree. Furthermore, if Biden does not resign (and he won’t, of course), 60 percent of those surveyed said he should be impeached. Rasmussen put that question by quoting Lindsey Graham and asking respondents whether they agreed with him. Graham’s statement was:
But there is one thing working in Biden’s favor. A majority of those surveyed do not consider Vice President Harris qualified to replace him. The split was 38-58 against the VP. I infer that the 38 percent who said Harris is qualified to be president and the 39 percent who said Biden should not resign are largely the same people — hard core Democrats. (The cross-tabs suggest otherwise, but they rely on peoples’ self-identification of their party affiliation.) If so, Biden and Harris appear to have almost no support from anyone else. At least for now, if the poll accurately reflects American public opinion.
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Biden Tried to Fake It, Failed
Posted: 01 Sep 2021 09:46 AM PDT (John Hinderaker)Reuters has obtained an audio recording and transcript of a phone conversation between Joe Biden and President Ghani of Afghanistan that took place on July 23. A partial transcript is here. The conversation had several notable aspects. First, Biden noted the perception that the war was not going well, and suggested that Ghani try to create the opposite impression, “whether it is true or not.”
Biden went on to explain how that might be done. Second, Biden promised that the U.S. would maintain air support for Afghanistan’s army at least through the end of August:
President Ghani emphasized the importance of U.S. air support:
This was one of many promises that Biden broke. The U.S. did not maintain close air support of Afghan forces, which is widely viewed as an important cause of the collapse of the Afghan army.
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The 10 [make that 2] percent solution
Posted: 01 Sep 2021 03:39 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)President Biden gave his statement on our departure from Afghanistan yesterday. The White House has posted the text of Biden’s remarks here. It has also posted video of his remarks on YouTube. I have posted the video below. We have been following Biden’s statements and remarks over the past two weeks. He had nothing new to say, but he said it louder and more belligerently than he did last week — like a mean drunk at closing time. As he slurred his words, he only amplified the effect. He took no questions. He turned his back and retreated, returning to the lectern only to grab his mask. A contradiction lies at the heart of his remarks. Our exit — our defeat by the Taliban — is a great success. ‘Twas a famous victory. Also, it’s Trump’s fault. Trump tied his hands! Biden is comforted in our disgrace by his lack of shame. Listening to his remarks live, I thought Biden made news with this: “The bottom line: Ninety percent of Americans in Afghanistan who wanted to leave were able to leave.” Doing the math with the White House numbers would give us another shot at figuring those we left behind. However, the White House transcript reflects this correction: “The bottom line: Doing the math with the White House numbers — two percent of 6,000 — I figure we left 120 citizens behind. According to Biden’s remarks, we left behind “100 to 200 Americans.” Translation: Biden almost kept his promise to leave no Americans behind! And Biden has next to no idea what he is saying as he recited the script he had been given. The American citizens left behind “have some intention to leave.” Translation: They are ambivalent about leaving. As I say, Biden is comforted in his shamelessness. Biden introduced his prematurely deceased son into the remarks:
As I say about Biden’s shamelessness… Bill McGurn wrote the Wall Street Journal column “Biden bets on cynicism” before Biden gave his speech yesterday. It was published On August 30. Because Biden was only repeating himself yesterday, McGurn’s column seemed to anticipate Biden’s remarks. For example, “Mr. Biden is not a Gold Star father and should stop playing one on TV.” Biden repeated stupid talking points he has previously made: “[T]here’s nothing China or Russia would rather have, would want more in this competition than the United States to be bogged down another decade in Afghanistan.” Does anyone believe this? They are especially distraught that we left behind $85 billion of materiel. All the talking points are stupid. Every one. To take another example: “This decision about Afghanistan is not just about Afghanistan. It’s about ending an era of major military operations to remake other countries.” That was an era Biden himself had supported, but it ended long ago. And of course we had the obligatory false choice. Here the choice was to surrender of “commit tens of thousands of more troops going back to war.” I will only observe that this was Barack Obama’s favorite rhetorical device to defend the indefensible. As I say about Biden’s shamelessness…
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The Geek in Pictures: Poll Position Edition
Posted: 31 Aug 2021 09:40 PM PDT (Steven Hayward)With the California recall two weeks away, it is an interesting coincidence that both polls trends for Biden and Newsom are tracking in a similar direction. Let the charting begin!
Lots of other interesting stuff happening out in identity land:
And what Geek in Pictures without some energy charts, all showing the same thing: fossil fuels? Yeah, they still rule.
Junk bonds: what could go wrong?
So why do we need massive federal government stimulus again?
Market capitalism at work:
The wisdom of crowds?
And finally. . .
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
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86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
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93.) JUST THE NEWS
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94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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96.) NOT THE BEE
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Not the Bee Daily Newsletter |
Sep 2, 2021 |
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Sponsored By: Dr. Marty Pet’s Does Your Dog Eat Grass? – 3 Signs He May Be SickIs your dog giving you a “warning” sign? According to Dr. Marty Goldstein, one of the top veterinarians in the world, many dogs are at risk of serious health issues… but their owners may be missing the warning signs.
Check out footage of the tornado that touched down near Washington, D.C. on WednesdayThe remnants of Hurricane Ida continued their northeastern march across the southern United States on Wednesday, spinning off severe storms and multiple tornado warnings throughout the day.
No words: Watch the Taliban’s victory parade featuring dozens of armored U.S. military vehicles and tons of weaponsThe disastrous U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan has been underscored by the fact that our military forces left behind untold numbers of weapons, equipment, vehicles and other critical provisions for the Taliban to just up and take.
Nothing To See Here, Just The Prime Minister Of Canada Dehumanizing Non-Vaccinated Citizens As “Those People”The attitude toward the non-vaxxed from those in positions of authority just gets wilder and more extreme.
The labor crisis has gotten so insanely bad that a McDonald’s in Oregon is seeking to hire 14-year-oldsAfter widespread forced business closures last year followed by months of paying people to stay at home and NOT work, how distorted and out-of-whack has the labor market become? This distorted and out-of-whack:
There’s a group of Orthodox Jews in NY that go around fixing people’s cars when they break down on the side of the road and yes it’s as heartwarming as it soundsSometimes even a flat tire on the side of a Long Island highway can turn out to be a blessing.
UNPERSONED: The Chinese government just erased one of its most famous actresses from history as though she never existedWe reference the term “Orwellian” a lot around these parts, but there’s a reason for that…
Amazon is having so much trouble finding delivery drivers that it’s apparently not going to screen applicants for marijuana useAmazon delivery drivers tend to be friendly and likable folks. Amazon’s new corporate policy, meanwhile, suggests that some drivers may, in the near future, be totally mellow and chill too:
Nothing to see here except an Aussie being forced into a quarantine “health hotel” for an “indefinite stay” 😬The guy in the following clip is in great physical shape with no visible symptoms of the ‘Rona.
Forbes just memory-holed an article it published by a child trauma expert warning of the alleged risks of school mask mandatesA few weeks ago Forbes published an article by teacher and Columbia University Ph.D student Zack Ringelstein, warning about the harms of mask mandates for kids:
TBS has a new show called “Chad” which is basically just a normal sitcom except Chad is played by a chick who apparently is pretending to be a boy or somethingOkay people, I realize it’s 2021 and all, but this…
Duke University went hardcore on COVID rules and then a bunch of people got mild COVID cases so now they’re cracking down even harderDuke University was among the countless schools this year that went hard on COVID rules as the semester began: The university required vaccinations for most students, mandatory masking in all indoor facilities, mandatory daily symptom checks for unvaccinated students, weekly testing for everyone, and even informal rules for how students can eat on campus.
Abortions after six weeks are now illegal in Texas after the Supreme Court refused to hear objections. The Left is freaking out.The Lone Star State has officially become the first state in the Union to legally enact a fetal heartbeat law after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a challenge by pro-abortion acolytes.
The director of the CDC just called gun violence a “serious public health threat” and says “something needs to be done” about it, and I’m thinking this will only make gun ownership even more contagiousApparently gun violence is a disease now.
China has now banned everyone under 18 from playing video games except for 8-9PM on the weekendsDo you want to know what it looks like to live in a communist society?
A weatherman was trying to do the forecast when his dog just waltzed on and crashed the segmentThey do weather reports a little differently up in Canada. One forecaster for Global News found himself sharing the screen with his own pooch this week while giving updates about weekly temperatures and Hurricane Ida:
New Tiffany & Co. campaign features Jay-Z and Beyonce and people are mad about it because they say it’s REALLY about, you guessed it, “white supremacy”Jay-Z and Beyonce were recently featured in Tiffany & Co.’s new ad campaign that proved even two prominent, black influencers can’t escape the wrath of woke leftists.
Project Veritas strikes again! This teacher is in Antifa and says he has only “180 days” to indoctrinate children into “revolutionaries.” As always, there’s video evidence.Okay you guys, get ready to pretend – pretend really hard – to be surprised, because the actual journalists at Project Veritas just released a video on a public school teacher from California who is about as left wing as they come.
Church Is Essential! John MacArthur’s Grace Community Church Gets Big Money In Settlement With LA County Over Lockdown DisputeIn VERY exciting and good news on Tuesday, Grace Community Church, which is pastored by John MacArthur, won a HUGE settlement against Los Angeles County. The county tried to prevent John MacArthur and Grace Community from having church services during the pandemic, claiming them to be “non-essential” services.
Biden says the Afghanistan withdrawal was an “extraordinary success.” Yeah, really.
A university asked a priest to self-censor his comments on abortion and euthanasia and the priest refused so the university said he couldn’t be a chaplainA British priest who refused to censor his own straightforward rhetoric on the topics of abortion and state-sponsored euthanasia has been barred from holding a chaplain position at a local university:
Has anyone noticed how medical data ignores the “multiple genders” nonsense?Syndicated radio host and conservative commentator Erick Erickson (full disclosure: I worked for Erickson a couple years writing for his “Resurgent” website) asked a very intriguing question recently that is not getting nearly enough attention.
Not the Bee launched one year ago today, and holy cow, what a ride it has beenOne year ago today, September 1, 2020, Dan Dillon, Seth Dillon, and myself launched Not the Bee.
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com |
Rep. Kinzinger Demands Count of Americans Left Behind in Afghanistan
Special: The Math Behind Biden and the Fed’s Spending Spree Joe Rogan Announces He Has COVID WH Official ‘Appalled, Horrified’ Biden Left Americans Behind: Report Special: The New ‘China Money Order’ Coming to America Biden Administration Has Lost Track of 1/3 of Migrant Children Ida’s Devastation Shocks as Fuel Shortages Hinder Recovery Supreme Court Refuses to Block Texas Abortion Ban Special: Man Called Tesla at $50, Says Buy This EV Stock |
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99.) MARK LEVIN
September 1, 2021
On Wednesday’s Mark Levin Show, President Biden still hasn’t acknowledged or saved the interpreter that saved his life in a trip to Afghanistan as Vice President. Biden is a coward that has ignited a genocide in Afghanistan. It’s a lie to say Afghanistan was a 20-year war because it’s been over for more than half a dozen years. In Barack Obama’s eight years he was not nation-building and brought home the majority of troops. Donald Trump wasn’t nation-building and brought home most of the troops that were left, but he also retained the ability to attack the enemy. Biden’s disastrous move to bring home 2,500 non-combat personnel that were focused on intelligence and air support has now caused a genocide. Then, the Biden Administration continues to dehumanize American citizens in Afghanistan with dual citizenship acting as if they don’t need help. Acting as if people aren’t being slaughtered and beaten. Acting as if Biden didn’t create this uniquely dangerous disaster with his decision to hastily withdraw from Afghanistan. How many people will die and become enslave in Biden’s genocide? Later, the American Academy of Neurology is now requiring anti-racism training. This will open the door to future lawsuits. This push for equity diversity and inclusion that chooses people based on race doesn’t make anything equal.
THIS IS FROM:
Rumble
Biden Chief of Staff Claims We Were Always Going To See Heartbreaking Scenes By Withdrawing
The Hill
McConnell: Biden ‘is not going to be removed from office’
Just The News
In secret texts, U.S. military officials lamented leaving Americans behind in Kabul
Twitter
The American Academy of Neurology is mandating “anti-racist” “education” for their entire staff.
The Hill
Democrats’ Jan. 6 subpoena-palooza sets dangerous precedent
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Chip Somodevilla
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Admin: It’s in our “best interests” to abandon Americans, happens all the timeRep. Ronny Jackson tweeted two facts that should be concerning to all Americans: …the National Security Advisor said it’s “in our best interest” to ABANDON Americans. Then the Pentagon said… | |
Fewer babies will be aborted in Texas, sending bad people into a rageThe new Texas pro-life law, the Texas Heartbeat Act, went into effect today. It will restrict all elective abortions after a detectable heartbeat, which occurs as early as six weeks. The… | |
Sullivan’s not sure if Taliban are ‘frenemy,’ adversary,’ or ‘what’Biden advisor Jake Sullivan doesn’t have very many answers to any questions. For example, the man doesn’t know how many Americans or Afghans who helped us are stranded in Afghanistan…. | |
Top FDA chiefs leave the FDA as White House fails to wait for the scienceSenior officials Marion Gruber and Phil Krause leaving the FDA. Apparently, “they’re frustrated that CDC and their ACIP committee are involved in decisions that they think should be up to… | |
Army Colonel: “We are f**king abandoning American citizens”“We are fucking abandoning American citizens,” said an Army colonel assigned to the 82nd Airborne Division in an encrypted Sunday text message to Michael Yon, who revealed the message to Just… | |
GOP lawmaker ‘missing’ in Afghanistan is ‘safe,’ says Biden’s lyingSo many great Americans, many who are Veterans, and many who are not, are stepping up to keep our promise…We will never leave an American behind. ~ Rep. Markwayne Mullin… | |
Psaki’s press conference doesn’t line up with reality in AfghanistanJen Psaki painted a rosy picture of rescue operations during the press conference today, but it’s one that doesn’t align with what Newsmax is hearing on the ground. Two private… | |
‘Leader’ McConnell: Biden “is not going to be removed from office”Biden “is not going to be removed from office” Senate Minority ‘Leader” Mitch McConnell said there will be no impeachment of Joe Biden because the House is controlled by Democrats…. | |
Watch the parade of US non-‘demilitarized’ vehicles in AfghanistanDuring his press conference over a zoom call two days ago, Woke Marine Gen. Kenneth McKenzie said some of the equipment had been “demilitarized,” essentially rendered inoperable (at Kabul airport)…. | |
‘Transparent’ Biden ordered report of military equipment left behind HIDDENAccording to an admission obtained from the State Department, Biden officials recently directed federal agencies to scrub their websites of official reports detailing the $82.9 billion in military equipment and… | |
Biden’s ‘extraordinary success’ included the droning of SIVs and children-IMPORTANT UPDATEUpdate: Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mark Milley said this morning that the strike on the family was a righteous strike and at least one person was ISIS-K (Pakistan Taliban)…. | |
Journalist report: DoD denied permission to drone suicide bomberAccording to Roger Pardo-Maurer, the former U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Western Hemisphere Affairs (2001-2006), the Department of Defense had foreknowledge of the Kabul Airport suicide bomber. They… | |
Nation’s worst Governor sexualizes young kids with Leftist gender tenetsGov. J.B. Pritzker (D) of Illinois signed SB 818 into law last Friday. The bill defines new sex education standards requiring kindergartners to learn to define gender identity. He said… | |
52% of Americans to Joe Biden: ResignBiden’s poll numbers are collapsing in the new Rasmussen poll: The new approve/disapprove ratio moves to -14% in this Rasmussen survey (42% vs 56%), a new low for him. A… | |
Lindsey Graham, a Democrat sympathizerTucker has used his show recently to go after Lindsey Graham, an establishment Republican, for all the misinformation he gave the public for decades about Afghanistan and for supporting the… | |
This is what the Pentagon knew before the Kabul bombing History will judge us by those final images. ~ Colin Kahl, the Pentagon’s top policy official THEY LEFT THE GATE OPEN Biden’s ‘Extraordinary Success’ in Kabul Omitted This Detail… | |
Suicidal US faces possible cultural changes, terrorism under Biden DemsWe now face cultural changes, dual governments, and terrorism on US soil as thousands of Afghans enter the US, but Democrats want them here. There was no concerted plan in… | |
Maybe When Biden and Blinken Vacationed Folks Believed Their Afghanistan Security LiesMaybe When Biden and Blinken Vacationed Folks Believed Their Afghanistan Security Lies How low can Biden, Blinken, and the other propagandists in this pitifully inept administration go? Led by a… | |
Unaccountable Joe disdainfully turns his back on AmericaAt the end of the press conference/PR speech yesterday, Biden once again showed that he does not feel accountable at all to the American people. He arrogantly and with complete… | |
We are all Soviets now as Pelosi’s thugs go after political opponentsNancy Pelosi’s J6 commission is demanding wireless companies hand over the personal records and all communications from sitting congresspeople and the Trump family and colleagues. It’s a witch hunt that would… | |
Squad demands a more radical reserve chairThe Communistas in the Squad demand someone more radical than Jerome Powell to now take the helm of the Federal Reserve for the next four years. They want him fired… | |
Bombshell Transcript: Biden had a secret deal in July to hide imminent Taliban threatReuters released a transcript today of a call between Afghanistan’s then-President Ashraf Ghani and Joe Biden during which they agreed to keep secret how badly things were going in the… | |
DoJ civil rights threatens to sue states for not forcing mask mandates on kidsThe civil rights division of the Justice Department is threatening to sue five Republican states – Iowa, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Utah — for voting to ban mask mandates…. | |
Pelosi refuses to allow combat vets in Congress to read off the names of the 13 fallenSpeaker Nancy Pelosi refused to allow combat veterans in Congress to read off the names of the 13 service members who died in Afghanistan. It’s not a surprise but it… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
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107.) BECKER NEWS
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
110.) RIGHT & FREE
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Politicians love force. The idea of leaving us alone to make our own decisions goes against their nature. To be sure, civilized society sometimes needs…
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Is this what Biden thinks an ‘extraordinary success’ is?
This is the grim reality many facing Ida’s floodwaters have to remember.
111.) UNITED VOICE
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112.) UNCOVER DC
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113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
Shhhhh. The information I’m about to share with you is dangerous and subversive. You cannot publish it on social media platforms without risking scary labels…
Insurgent Conservatives
PO Box 8161 Greenwood, IN 46142
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