MORNING NEWS BRIEFING – NOVEMBER 3, 2021

Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday November 3, 2021

1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL

November 3 2021

Good morning from Washington, where liberal pundits are trying to explain GOP nominee Glenn Youngkin’s triumph in the Virginia governor’s race over returning Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe. Mary Margaret Olohan, reporting from a Youngkin celebration, also has video of school parents who back the Republican. Fred Lucas reports on the outcomes of New York’s mayoral race and New Jersey’s gubernatorial contest. On the podcast, Virginia Allen chats with Heritage Foundation scholar Hans von Spakovsky about his new book on reforming American elections. On this date in 2014, One World Trade Center opens in Manhattan as part of a complex replacing the twin towers and other buildings destroyed in the 9/11 attacks.

NEWS
Republican Glenn Youngkin Wins Virginia Governor’s Race, Stunning Democrats
By Mary Margaret Olohan
“We are going to embrace our parents, not ignore them,” says Glenn Youngkin.
NEWS
Winsome Sears, Virginia’s Next Lieutenant Governor, Makes History as First Black Woman to Win Statewide
By Fred Lucas
Sears opposed critical race theory in schools, telling Fox News, “It supposedly is to help someone who looks like me and I’m sick of it; I’m sick of being used by the Democrats.”
NEWS
Meet the Parents Behind Youngkin's Victory
By Mary Margaret Olohan
On the eve of the Virginia election, The Daily Signal interviewed parents at a Loudoun County rally about why they were voting for Glenn Youngkin.
NEWS
Too Close to Call in Razor-Thin New Jersey Governor's Race
By Fred Lucas
New Jersey reportedly has 1 million more registered Democrats than Republicans. But as of early Wednesday morning, the gubernatorial race was too close to call.
NEWS
Former NYPD Captain Eric Adams to Become NYC Mayor
By Fred Lucas
In a departure from Mayor Bill de Blasio’s policies, Mayor-elect Eric Adams opposes defunding police and supports restoring some form of stop-and-frisk.
ANALYSIS
New Book Explains ‘How the Left Changed the Way You Vote’
By Virginia Allen
“There were more lawsuits filed last year before the election trying to change the laws and the rules governing the election process than in any year in our entire history,” says Hans von Spakovsky.
NEWS
‘We Need the Police’: Minneapolis Voters Reject Measure to Abolish Police
By Thomas Catenacci
Violent crime has surged throughout Minneapolis over the last year.
LOGO-CHARCOAL_75percent.jpg

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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES

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3.) DAYBREAK

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1.
Glenn Youngkin Wins Virginia Race for Governor

Called by the networks late last night (Fox News). The results (NY Times). Exit polls show education was a top priority for Youngkin voters (Fox News). From Tom Cotton: If you shut down schools, force kids to wear masks, indoctrinate them to hate America, call their parents domestic terrorists, and lecture them about pronouns, don’t be surprised when the voters reject your party (Twitter). From Jonah Goldberg: All of the people on MSNBC convincing themselves that all of these VA voters — who voted for Biden a year ago! — are idiots, racists, and/or dupes is pretty wild (Twitter). From David Harsanyi: Please keep obsessing over Trump and telling parents to shut up. Oh, and ally with the Lincoln Project (Twitter). From Avik Roy: And so it’s ironic that CRT is a hot topic in the Virginia governors’ race. The most structurally racist thing that happened in Virginia over the last two years was the forced closure of schools (Twitter). From Ben Shapiro: So, what exactly is the incentive for Manchin and Sinema to now jump on board the Build Back Better nonsense? (Twitter).

2.
Virginia Elects First Black Woman to Statewide Office

And she’s a conservative. From the story: Republican Winsome Sears has defeated Democrat Hala Ayala to replace Justin Fairfax as Virginia’s lieutenant governor. Sears becomes the first black woman to win a statewide race in Virginia with her victory over Fairfax, the gubernatorial candidate who refused to resign in spite of two credible sexual assault allegations (Washington Examiner). Many have retweeted a picture of her holding what appears to be an AR-15 (Twitter).

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3.
In Shocker, New Jersey Governor’s Race Too Close to Call

As of late last night (Fox News). Many polls had the incumbent, Philip Murphy, with a near double-digit lead over Jack Ciattarelli (above) (RCP). Dan McLaughlin predicted a week ago this race would be close, explaining “Murphy should have been a prime target if the state had not drifted so far into the blue column. New Jersey has taken a 1-2 punch from COVID and COVID lockdowns: the highest death rate of any political subdivision on the planet, but also the fourth-highest unemployment rate in the country (7.1 percent as of September 2021). Forced to choose between keeping his constituents safe and keeping the state open for business and schooling, Murphy chose neither. He infamously shared Andrew Cuomo’s ruinous early policy of sending infected senior citizens back to nursing homes” (National Review). The numbers (NY Times).

4.
Minneapolis Anti-Police Referendum Fails

The Associated Press gave the concept a shiny cover with this: Minneapolis voters on Tuesday rejected a proposal to replace the city’s police department with a new Department of Public Safety, an idea that supporters hoped would bring radical change to policing in the city where George Floyd’s death under an officer’s knee brought calls for racial justice (AP).  From Erielle Davidson: The wave against wokeism. Pendulum is swinging (Twitter). From Christina Sommers: A Minneapolis ballot measure to defund the police and replace them with social workers has failed (Twitter). From Spencer Brown: With more than 55 percent voting “no,” Minneapolis residents decided that their city charter should not be amended to abolish the city’s police force, just another rebuke to Democrats and the far left agenda on Tuesday night (Townhall).

5.
Texas Governor Works to Protect Children from Pornography in School

From the story: Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott sent a letter to Dan Troxell, executive director of the Texas Association of School Boards, on Monday demanding the state protect children from being exposed to pornography or other inappropriate content in Texas public schools (The Western Journal). From Greg Abbott: Calling on the Texas Association of School Boards to shield children from pornography, inappropriate content in Texas public schools (Twitter). From Rep. Jeff Cason: My statement regarding sexually explicit material in our Texas school libraries (Twitter).

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6.
Democrats Lose Majority in Virginia House

With at least five seats flipped.

The Federalist

7.
Enes Kanter Continues to Hammer China

From the story: Boston Celtics backup center Enes Kanter continues to ignore NBA boundaries by speaking out against China and their reprehensible human rights violations. Last month, Kanter declared support for “free Tibet” and bashed Chinese president Xi Jinping as a “brutal dictator.” One week later, Kanter ranted against one of the NBA’s biggest sponsors in Nike, for profiting off Chinese slave labor (Mediaite). From Enes Kanter: Ruthless Dictator XI JINPING and the Cultish Chinese Communist Party, hear me loud and clear: Hong Kong will be FREE! To all Hongkongers watching, please know that I stand with you. You are not Chinese, you are not British, you are Hongkongers (Twitter)! From Breitbart: China responded to Kanter’s latest broadsides by blacking outstreaming video of Boston Celtics games and blocking Internet searches for Kanter’s name. The NBA has been, to put it charitably, quietly supportive of Kanter for speaking his mind thus far (Breitbart).

8.
NY Times: Some Thanksgiving Dinners have Vaccination Requirements

Mostly people who believe what the New York Times is feeding them.

NY Times

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9.
Iowa Governor Passes Bill Allowing Fired, Unvaccinated Workers to Collect Unemployment

From the story: Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, a Republican, signed a bill on Friday allowing constituents to obtain unemployment benefits if they are fired from their job for refusing to take the Wuhan coronavirus vaccine. Reynolds, who is vaccinated against COVID-19, has been a vocal opponent of mandates surrounding the virus, such as vaccine mandates and school mask mandates. She signed the bill Friday after the Iowa Legislature passed it in a one-day special session. It went into effect immediately (Townhall). From Iowa.gov: Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter to the contrary, an individual who is discharged from employment for refusing to receive a vaccination against COVID-19, as defined in section 686D.2, shall not be disqualified for benefits on account of such discharge (Iowa.gov). From Governor Kim Reynolds: Today, I’m announcing that the State of Iowa is joining a federal lawsuit to challenge President Biden’s unprecedented use of the government to force every employee of every federal contractor in America, including thousands of Iowans, to take a vaccine against their wishes (Twitter).

10.
Mike Rowe: We’ve Lost Our Work Ethic

The “Dirty Jobs” host was responding to a question about the labor shortage.

Daily Caller

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4.) THE SUNBURN

Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 11.3.21

Florida politics and Sunburn — perfect together.

Good Wednesday morning

INFLUENCE Magazine’s recognition of the Rising Stars of Florida politics will be unveiled in the January issue.

Right now, we are taking nominations for who belongs on this prestigious list. (How prestigious? Well, consider the fact Gov. Ron DeSantis‘ former Chief of Staff, Adrian Lukis, and current Communications Director, Taryn Fenske, were both spotted early on in their careers on the list.

We knew Adrian Lukis back when. Image via Ballard Partners.

We are looking for bright shiny faces from the campaign, lobbying, fundraising, and public affairs arena. This will be a tight list of about 25 individuals, so make your nominations count.

Email your nominations to .

___

Spotted — At the Celebration of Life Ceremony for Greg Turbeville at the Ballard Partners office in Tallahassee. Turbeville died June 30, 2020, at age 49: Mike Abrams, Ellen Anderson, Jeff Atwater, Brian Ballard, Brady Benford, Rebecca BennThad Beshears, Amy Bisceglia, Pam Bondi, Carol Bracy, Christy Daly Brodeur, Jason Brodeur, Steve and Brandi Brown, Bob Burleson, Brad BurlesonGeorgia Cappleman, Oscar Chemerinski, Tony Crapp, Steve Crisafulli, Ana Cruz, Jose Felix Diaz, Tom DiGiacomo, Tom Feeney, Mathew Forrest, Adam Goodman, Jan Gorrie, Alexander Gray, Chris Hansen, David Johnson, John Johnston, Todd Josko, Sylvester Lukis, Adrian Lukis, Jim Magill, Joe McCann, Dan McFaul, Gene McGee, Steve McNamara, Holly Miller, Carlos Munoz, Eugene O’Flaherty, John O’Hanlon, Stephen Passacantilli, FSU College of Music Dean Todd Queen, Monica Rodriguez, Pat Rooney, Katherine San Pedro, Justin Sayfie, Cheryl Seinfeld, Mac Stipanovich, Frank Terraferma, Tola Thompson, Todd Thomson, John Thrasher, Heather Turnbull, Abby Vail, Wansley Walters, Robert Wexler, Courtney Whitney, Amy Young and Stephanie Grutman Zauder.

___

I’m talking here — The Florida League of Cities holds its 2021 Legislative Conference today through Friday, led by League President Phillip Walker, Commissioner for Lakeland. The event features the latest on the state’s top issues and an update of the League’s legislative priorities and ways to promote Home Rule. At 3:45 p.m. Thursday, join me, Matt Dixon from POLITICO and Dara Kam from the News Service of Florida for a discussion (moderated by consultant Steve Vancore) on how the media landscape has changed and big issues that will dominate the 2022 Legislative Session. Registration desk opens today at 2 p.m.; events start at 3 p.m., Embassy Suites Orlando — Lake Buena Vista South, 4955 Kyngs Heath Road, Kissimmee.

View schedule and agenda here.

— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —

@Robillard: the move is to tweet about the early exits to get those sweet, sweet RTs but also apologize for doing so to show how savvy you are

@MaggieNYT: What if the takeaway from this race is both that these voters rejected (JoeBiden * and * they don’t want a return of (DonaldTrump?

@DaveWeigel: Crucial mistake by Virginia Dems: Hit “update” on their election-stealing software too late, and the patch wasn’t installed yet when polls closed.

@DouthatNYT: I’ll just say it: Glenn Youngkin should seriously consider running for President in 2024.

@KyLamb: In my opinion, blue-collar Virginians are speaking for Americans this evening. They’re showing that they appreciate leaders that stand up for parents’ rights, education, mandates and bullying. There is a reason what Florida is doing is so popular both in Florida and the U.S.

@Fineout: So … maybe resigning from the Legislature was …

Tweettweet:

 

@RyanEGorman@ashleybauman is the political version of #ChampaBay. Her candidates keep winning it all.

@KentStermon: Any company Adrian Lukis joins is a much better place than it was the day before

Tweettweet:

 

@ByJasonDelgado.@MagicJohnson is speaking to student-athletes inside the state Capitol and he closes with a hot take: “LeBron is not as good as Michael.”

Tweet, tweet:

 

Tweet, tweet:

 

— DAYS UNTIL —

The Blue Angels 75th anniversary show — 2; Disney’s ’Eternals’ premieres — 2; ’Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 3; ’Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 5; U.S. to lift restrictions for fully vaccinated international travelers — 5; Miami at FSU — 7; ‘Hawkeye’ premieres — 11; Special Session on vaccine mandates begins — 12; ExcelinEd National Summit on Education begins — 15; FSU vs. UF — 24; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 28; Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri’s death — 34; Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 37; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 44; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 49; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 56; CES 2022 begins — 63; NFL season ends — 67; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 69; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 69; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 69; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 70; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 72; NFL playoffs begin — 73; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 93; Super Bowl LVI — 102; Daytona 500 — 109; St. Pete Grand Prix — 116; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 122; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 185; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 205; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 211; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 247; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 259; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 338; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 366; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 373; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 408; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 471; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 625. ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 716; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 996.


— ELECTION RESULTS —

Dale Holness or Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick will replace Alcee Hastings in Congress” via Anthony Man and Angie DiMichele of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Holness and Cherfilus-McCormick were effectively tied in a Primary that may not have a definitive result for another week or more. Cherfilus-McCormick and Holness had just under 24% of the vote at 9:45 p.m. Holness won Broward County, where most of the primary voters live, and Cherfilus-McCormick was far ahead in Palm Beach County. Mathematically, none of the other nine candidates had a path to victory. An ultra-close race could take some time to sort out. Overseas and military ballots have an extra 10 days to arrive at elections offices. Florida law provides for recounts if the races are closer than 0.5%. After the initial recount by machine, if there is less than 0.25% difference, ballots that couldn’t be accurately read by machine are counted by hand.

Ken Welch is victorious in St. Petersburg mayoral race” via Colleen Wright of the Tampa Bay Times — Welch will be the city’s first Black Mayor. His campaign declared victory at 7:16 p.m. In a statement, Welch gave his thanks. “First and foremost, thank you, thank you, thank you from the bottom of my heart,” Welch said. “Because of each and every one of you here today, we have made history. But this election is not about me, it’s because of the giants that came before me — it’s because of the inclusive progress we are working toward, and that’s why we’re all here today.” With 84 of 92 precincts reporting by about 7:35, Welch had about 60% of the vote against opponent Robert Blackmon. Welch’s four-year term will start when he is inaugurated at the first City Council meeting in 2022 on Jan. 6.

Ken Welch makes St. Pete history. Image via @eunicortiz/Twitter.

Lisset Hanewicz wins in District 4 race, becomes first Hispanic on St. Pete City Council” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — Becoming the first Hispanic person to serve on the St. Petersburg City Council, Hanewicz defeated Raymond James investment banker Tom Mullins in the District 4 race, 54% to 46%. Hanewicz, 50, will replace Council member Darden Rice in District 4. Hanewicz also got the most votes in the primary election that involved four other candidates. A former state prosecutor and president of the Crescent Lake Neighborhood Association, Hanewicz said she wants to ensure every neighborhood is a safe location and to support vulnerable populations. She also wants to ensure St. Petersburg retains its character while allowing for affordable housing. Changing zoning laws to allow for more density can assist with that, she said.

—”Copley Gerdes bests Bobbie Shay Lee, will replace Robert Blackmon on City Council” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics

In District 8 race, Richie Floyd and Jeff Danner end neck-and-neck” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — As votes rolled in, the margin between the two candidates seemed so slim that it would put them in the possible zone for a state-mandated recount. But when the vast majority of the batch of mail-in ballots were counted, Floyd’s edge on Danner grew beyond the zone for a recount. In the General Election, where all city voters could cast a ballot, Floyd ended with 50.70% compared to Danner’s 49.30% of the vote as of Tuesday night. If two candidates in a race are within 0.5% of each other, state law requires a machine recount. With 100% of precincts reporting, Floyd led Danner by about 800 votes, or 1.4%.

—“Voters say no to closed-district voting, as only 2 of 7 amendments OK’d in St. Pete” via Daniel Figueroa of Florida Politics

Orlando Commissioners Jim Gray, Regina Hill reelected” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Gray and Hill cruised to new terms in the city election Tuesday, again demonstrating that Orlando’s voters apparently like how the city and its government are running. Gray, an executive in commercial real estate investment, won a third full term representing District 1, a large region on the city’s southeast side. He soundly defeated activist Sunshine Grund and retired Orlando police officer Bill Moore. In unofficial results with all votes accounted for except provisional ballots, Gray had 62%, compared with 23% for Grund, and 15% for Moore. Hill, a nurse, won a third term representing District 5, which covers much of the city’s east side. She defeated nonprofit executive Shaniqua “Shan” Rose. In unofficial results, Hill had 73%, compared with 27% for Rose.

Commissioner Robert Stuart survives challenge in Orlando” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Stuart won a fifth term in a close election Tuesday to represent Orlando’s north side on City Council. Stuart, a retired social services executive and longtime player in Orlando politics, managed to stay above 50% of the total votes in a three-way election Tuesday, defeating Nicolette Springer and Samuel Chambers, who both challenged him from the left. In unofficial returns Tuesday with all votes except for provisional ballots counted, Stuart received 51% of the vote; Springer, 44%; and Chambers, 5% of the vote. It was the second close election in a row that Stuart won.

Bill Mutz secures second term as Lakeland Mayor” via Daniel Figueroa of Florida Politics — Mutz defeated far-right political newcomer Saga Stevin to lock in his second four-year term as Lakeland’s Mayor. Early results from the Polk County Supervisor of Elections Office show Mutz took 67% of the vote, while Stevin scored 33%, with all precincts reporting. Turnout was low in Polk County, with only 20% of voters casting ballots. Lakeland’s mayoral race was unexpectedly contentious. It became more about ideological differences and right-wing talking points than the real issues facing the city, including the fact that it’s experienced the second-highest population growth in the country.

Bill Mutz takes a solid win in Lakeland. Image via Facebook.

Lake Mary voters return Commissioner Justin York to office” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Lake Mary voters showed overwhelming approval Tuesday for City Commissioner York, handing him resounding reelection over challenger Kristina Renteria, 73% to 27%. York’s victory endorsed his record and pledges to continue working to redevelop the downtown area into a live-work-play community, using some of the $8 million the city is receiving in federal grants. Unlike much of Seminole County, Lake Mary is now primarily built out and developed a sound mix of residential and commercial. But there are older neighborhoods in need of redevelopment, and there are limited opportunities for new housing. York sees opportunities in the older central city where federal dollars could go toward septic-to-sewer conversions, and money could be used to improve the center’s infrastructure.

Megan Sladek reelected Mayor of Oviedo” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Sladek has been reelected in a three-way battle in which both of her opponents had primarily agreed on her agenda but tried to create doubts about her ability to work with the City Council. Voters did not share that concern. Sladek easily won a second full term as Mayor after serving a term on the City Council. Challenger Kevin Hipes is a real estate redeveloped who served as a Sanford City Commissioner before moving to Oviedo. Challenger Abe López is a teacher and small-business owner with a public service past in New Jersey. In an Oviedo City Council race, challenger Natalie Teuchert, a mechanical engineer, ousted incumbent Council member Judith Dolores Smith.

In Manatee County, voters approve schools tax extension that helps back teacher pay” via Ryan McKinnon of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Manatee County voters agreed to renew the School District’s one-mill property tax on Tuesday, maintaining a $46 million revenue stream for schools and showing support for the district’s academic progress since the tax was enacted in 2018. The referendum passed 70% to 30%, with roughly 66,000 registered voters casting a ballot, with 66 of the county’s 70 precincts reporting. If the vote had gone the other way, school officials said they “were not bluffing” in saying that they had no backup pot of money to fund millions of dollars in staff salary supplements, meaning all employees would have seen pay cut, with teachers’ salaries reduced by more than $5,000. The added tax costs will cost the average homeowner $175 annually.

Miami Mayor Francis Suarez reelected in a landslide victory” via Joey Flechas of the Miami Herald — Suarez won reelection Tuesday night, handily defeating lesser-known opponents to earn his second four-year term as the figurehead of South Florida’s most populous city. Before Election Day, Suarez captured about 79% of the mail ballots and early votes, building a giant lead before polls opened Tuesday. Suarez’s reelection was so anticipated that fans and supporters barely noticed when a big screen projecting results at his election party showed the Mayor ahead of his second-place opponent by more than 13,000 votes. With such a significant lead, and a low Election Day turnout, by 7:30 p.m. Suarez had locked in a second term as Miami’s 34th mayor, the first to be born in the Magic City and son of the city’s first Cuban-born Mayor, Xavier Suarez.

Frances Suarez takes it in a landslide. Image via AP.

—“Christine King unseats Jeffrey Watson on Miami Commission, Joe Carollo holds onto office” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics

—”Two Miami Beach Commission races set for Nov. 16 runoff” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics

Miami Beach voters approve push to move up last call to 2 a.m.” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Miami Beach voters are supporting a change to the city’s liquor regulations, forcing bars to now stop selling alcohol at 2 a.m., a full three hours earlier than the current 5 a.m. last call. More than 56% of residents backed moving last call to 2 a.m., while 44% opposed the change. The debate over that last call time has persisted throughout the year. Tuesday’s referendum was a nonbinding straw ballot item meant to gauge resident support for making last call three hours earlier. But multiple members of the City Commission said they would honor the voters’ decision and approve an ordinance if voters endorsed the change. This wasn’t the first time the city took action. In May, The Commission agreed via a 4-3 vote to immediately move the last call time to 2 a.m., subject to giving voters the final say in November.

‘What our residents want’: Miami Beach voters pass 2 a.m. alcohol sales referendum” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — Mayor Dan Gelber, who ran parallel campaigns for reelection and to pass the 2 a.m. referendum, declared victory in both efforts just before 8 p.m. Tuesday. “This is what our residents want,” Gelber told reporters while surrounded by supporters and his family at a campaign watch party at The Carlyle hotel. Gelber said he expects city staff to develop legislation to codify the referendum. He also expects his colleagues on the Commission to support any measure to restrict alcohol sales after 2 a.m. after seeing that most voters support such a move.

Esteban “Steve” Bovo wins Hialeah Mayor race” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Bovo emerged victorious from Tuesday’s election to become Hialeah’s new Mayor, marking a new chapter for Miami-Dade County’s second-most populous city. Bovo captured 59% of the vote at 7:50 p.m., with 45 of 48 precincts reporting. Of 21,648 votes cast, 12,776 were in his favor. His closest competitor, former Hialeah Council member Isis Garcia-Martinez, received 21.5% of the vote. Former Hialeah Mayor Julio Martínez nabbed just 1.9% of the vote, outpacing Hialeah resident Juan Santana but falling far behind third-place candidate Fernando Godo, who more than 16% of city voters supported on the ballot. The five-way race to replace term-limited Mayor Carlos Hernández included several notable names, though Bovo and Garcia-Martinez had positioned themselves as the presumptive front-runners in the lead-up to Election Day.

—”Bovo rides political experience, Donald Trump endorsement to become Mayor of Hialeah” via Aaron Leibowitz of the Miami Herald

Homestead Mayor Steve Losner wins reelection in close race” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — With all precincts reporting at 8:30 p.m., Losner received 51% of the vote, represented by 1,693 ballots cast in his favor. Former Council member Elvis Maldonado got 1,635 votes. Losner, 60, is a fourth-generation Homestead resident and a past City Council member. He returned to politics to run for Mayor in 2019 after more than a decade away — he’s a lawyer with a private practice in the city — to address what he called Homestead’s “untapped potential,” including bringing more dining, retail and entertainment options and building more quality housing. Since he took office, the city opened Homestead Station, a massive downtown shopping and entertainment complex. There’s also been ample residential development, with the median sales price of a single-family home rising by $150,000 since 2016.

John Chappie reelected as Mayor of Bradenton Beach” via Tampa Bay 10 — Chappie has been reelected as Mayor of Bradenton Beach. His victory comes as early results show he won 69.4-30.5% over challenger David Galuszka. Chappie first took office in 2001 as Mayor of Bradenton Beach. Before that, he served in the Commission in 1997. When Chappie reached his mayoral term limit in 2007, he was elected County Commissioner in 2008. Three years later, he would resign and later win a Commission seat in 2011. Spending the years in between on the County Commission, Chappie has most recently served as Mayor of Bradenton Beach since 2017. He ran uncontested to be reelected in 2019.

John Chappie gets another term in Bradenton Beach. Image via Facebook.

Sunny Isles Beach voters send mayoral candidates to runoff” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — Voters in Sunny Isles Beach sent two mayoral candidates to a runoff election — where they will decide who should serve the remainder of the term vacated by George “Bud” Scholl. Current Commissioner Dana Goldman and Mayor Larisa “Laura” Svechin who assumed mayoral duties on Sept. 1 pending Tuesday’s special election, will compete again on Nov. 16 to determine who will serve the rest of the term, ending in November 2022. With all precincts reporting, unofficial results from the Miami-Dade County Elections Department show that Goldman captured 41% of the vote and Svechin captured 37%. Since neither candidate received more than 50% of the vote, a runoff election will be held. Just 2,273 out of 12,155 registered voters participated in the election.

Helen Moore, Jim Boldt win Venice Council races” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Venice City Councilmember Moore defeated challenger Sandy Sibley with 54.81% of the vote. Boldt, meanwhile, came out on top in a three-person field for the open Seat 4, with 50.15% to Jennifer Lewis’ 40.02% and Chris Simmons’ 9.82%. The election had become a partisan affair, with the Republican Party of Sarasota backing Moore and Boldt while the Sarasota Democratic Party supported Sibley and Lewis. Boldt touted his business background as a chief qualification. In the coming years, he said, Venice needs its infrastructure to keep up with continued growth. The city must remain financially healthy, so there’s no lapse in city services. Moore defended her seat, and with it, the planning process that’s been underway several years in the city.

— DATELINE TALLY —

As Special Session approaches, Florida lawmakers have no specific language to chew on” via Mike Vasilinda of WCTV — The Special Session of the Florida Legislature called by DeSantis is less than two weeks away. It was called to deal with mask policies, vaccine requirements, and other COVID-19-related issues, but there was still no specific language for lawmakers to chew on as of Tuesday. With lobbyists in the hallways, Florida’s Capitol resembled pre-pandemic days this week, but vaccines and mask mandates are very much on the agenda in the coming Special Session. “To add protections for people in the state of Florida,” said DeSantis when he announced the Session in late October.

Ron DeSantis calls a Special Session, but there is no substance yet.

Erin Grall: PIP is coming back in 2022, but not ‘phantom medical bills’” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — As the Florida Legislature considers bills to limit civil actions, a leading House Republican said the House will once again consider repealing personal injury protection law, but is not likely to advance a proposal to eliminate so-called “phantom medical bills,” Grall said she will continue to work on repealing Florida’s no-fault automobile insurance law known as personal injury protection. She passed a bill to repeal PIP last year, but it was vetoed by DeSantis. Grall said she has been trying to understand what DeSantis’s primary concerns with her bill were and that she has not yet had detailed conversations with the administration.

Free book delivery program, a Chris Sprowls priority, rolls out to 30,000 students next month” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Free books are getting shipped on time to 30,000 students who are currently below reading level. Deliveries are on pace to begin Dec. 15 in the New Worlds Reading Initiative, a Sprowls priority signed by DeSantis this summer. The program provides free book home delivery to elementary students who read below grade level. Recipients will get one free book every month for nine months throughout the school year. Multiple students per household can receive books. However, students must opt-in to the program. More than 500,000 students are eligible, administrators told the House Education and Employment Committee on Tuesday.

After Ron DeSantis’ veto, juvenile expungement bill clears first legislative hurdle” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — A Senate panel gave the first approval to an altered juvenile arrest expungement proposal after DeSantis vetoed a version passed unanimously this spring. Sen. Keith Perry is carrying the bill (SB 342) that would expand opportunities to expunge first-time arrests from juvenile records to felony charges. But this time, Perry and the Representative carrying the House counterpart (HB 195), Rep. David Smith, removed forcible felonies from the list after DeSantis’ concerns. “Otherwise, the bill’s the same as last year,” Perry told the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday. Florida currently allows minors to expunge first-time misdemeanors if they complete a diversion program. The bill would expand juvenile expunction laws to include most felonies and other arrests beyond the first offense.

Senate panel OKs retroactive reduced sentencing for some felonies” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Lawmakers took the first step Tuesday to allowing reduced sentences for some felony charges to apply retroactively beginning next year. In the last decade, the Legislature has lowered sentences and removed some minimum mandatory sentences. A bill filed by Sen. Darryl Rouson (SB 276) would allow those serving the previous mandatory time for some charges to be resentenced under the new standards. The Senate Criminal Justice Committee approved the St. Petersburg Democrat’s bill unanimously Tuesday. “In sum, this bill is about hindsight. It’s about equity and fairness in sentencing,” Rouson told the panel.

Proposal to rename Criminal Punishment Code clears first committee stop” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Florida may soon rename its Criminal Punishment Code under a bill OK’d Tuesday by a Senate committee. Sponsored by Sen. Jason Pizzo, the measure (SB 260) would change the name to the Criminal Public Safety Code. The Senate Committee on Criminal Justice voted unanimously to approve the bill without debate or amendments. “I think we invite all Floridians to get involved in the work that we do by simply beginning with the ethos of changing from punishment to public safety,” said Pizzo, a former prosecutor. According to a staff analysis, the primary purpose of the current code is to “punish the offender.”

Bill to stiffen penalties for firefighter killers clears first committee” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — A Senate committee passed a bill Tuesday that would stiffen criminal penalties against those who murder an on-duty firefighter. Under the proposal (SB 370), the convicted murderer of a firefighter would face the same consequences as a person who killed a police or correctional officer, life in prison without the possibility of parole. Sen. Ed Hooper, a former firefighter himself, is the bill sponsor. “Those that serve and protect us need to have the same protection when they are attacked and killed,” Hooper said. The Senate Criminal Justice Committee voted unanimously in favor of the bill. Lawmakers heard testimony from Randy Wise, a representative of the Florida Professional Firefighters Association.

VISIT FLORIDA extension clears first Senate panel” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — A Senate proposal to extend the life of VISIT FLORIDA to at least 2031 cleared its first panel Tuesday, with unanimous approval from the Committee on Commerce and Tourism. Republican Sen. Hooper‘s bill (SB 434) would postpone the sunset date for Florida’s tourism marketing agency from the current 2023 to 2031. “VISIT FLORIDA is as important to the economy and economic wealth of our state as any other endeavor that I can possibly think of,” said Hooper, who chairs the committee but handed the gavel to Republican Sen. Tom Wright for the SB 434 hearing. The Legislature has been keeping VISIT FLORIDA on a rolling, two-year life span, grudgingly moving the sunset clause forward every year.

‘Victims of Communism Day’ bill requiring public school lesson advances” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Legislation that would require the government and public schools to declare a “Victims of Communism Day” and include a lesson on the perils that form of government presents is now one step closer to becoming law. Members of the Senate Education Committee voted to advance a bill (SB 268) by Sen. Manny Diaz Jr. If enacted, the bill would require the state to recognize Nov. 7 as “Victims of Communism Day” and hold unspecified public demonstrations at the Capitol and elsewhere honoring “the 100 million people who fell victim to communist regimes across the world.” Beginning on Nov. 7, 2023, and continuing every Nov. 7 after that, U.S. government classes in public school under the proposal “must receive at least 45 minutes of instruction on Victims of Communism Day.

Manny Diaz makes headway with his ‘Victims of Communism Day.’

Senate school bus service expansion advances despite driver dearth — A Senate Education Committee advanced a bill (SB 270) Tuesday that would require school districts to bus students who live more than 1 mile away from their school, rather than the current two-mile radius. Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida reported that the bill would require pickups for an estimated 193,000 more schoolchildren and comes amid a labor crunch in school bus depots across the state. The plan will also cost school districts an extra $184.5 million if the Legislature doesn’t help cover the tab. Currently, school bus service already costs districts more than what the state provides. Though it didn’t support or oppose it, the Florida Association of District School Superintendents said the bill could worsen an already difficult situation.

Senate Democrats change rules on booting members — Senate Democrats adopted new rules that would allow the caucus to expel members for “violating a caucus position or impugning the integrity of the caucus.” As reported by Bruce Ritchie of POLITICO Florida, the changes come after Sens. Gary Farmer and Lauren Book engaged in a bitter feud last Session that resulted in the caucus removing Farmer and installing Book as Democratic Leader. The old rules, in place since 2016, allowed removal for “good cause” but lacked details. Sen. Lori Berman, the caucus rules chair, said the rewrite was overdue. Farmer claims he was the only member to vote against the change. Book wouldn’t say if the overhaul was a direct result of the feud, but said it was a “really smart and insightful thing” for the caucus to reexamine the rules.

Personnel note: Michael Wickersheim moves to Department of Elder Affairs  Wickersheim is leaving his post as the Florida Department of Children and Families’ legislative affairs director for the Chief of Staff job at the Department of Elder Affairs. Wickersheim is a veteran government affairs professional with a broad portfolio of experience in state government. Before DCF, he spent three years working at the Florida Department of Transportation, most of it as its deputy legislative affairs director. He also served as now-Sen. Jeff Brandes’ campaign manager when he first ran for the House. He then worked as a legislative assistant to the St. Petersburg Republican. Wickersheim earned his bachelor’s degree from Troy University.

— TALLY 2 —

New and renewed lobbying registrations:

Susan Anderson: Florida Health Care Association

Taylor Biehl, Capitol Alliance Group: Florida Agencies Serving the Blind

Andrea Gheen, PinPoint Results: SEIU 1199 United Health Care Workers

Elizabeth Guzzo: Office of the Attorney General

Neisha-Rose Hines: ACLU of Florida

Scott Jenkins, Delegal Aubuchon Consulting: Teaching Hospital Council of Florida

Lori Killinger, Kasey Lewis, Chris Lyon, Lewis Longman & Walker: Florida Osteopathic Medical Association

Brittanie Lee: Broward County

Joseph Salzverg, GrayRobinson: Atlantic Housing Partners

Rhoda Washington: Information Technology Industry Council

Legislative committee meeting schedule:

— The Senate Banking and Insurance Committee meets to consider SB 156, from Sen. Doug Broxson, to change to “loss run statements” related to insurance claims, paid losses and other issues, 8:30 a.m., Room 412 of the Knott Building.

— The Senate Community Affairs Committee meets to consider SB 224, from Sen. Joe Gruters, to permit local governments to restrict smoking at public parks and beaches, 8:30 a.m., Room 37 of the Senate Office Building.

— The Senate Transportation Committee meets for an update about legislative priorities of the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, 8:30 a.m., Room 110 of the Senate Office Building.

— The House Infrastructure and Tourism Appropriations Subcommittee meets for an update from the Department of State about Help America Vote Act grants, 9 a.m., Reed Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Secondary Education and Career Development Subcommittee meets for an update from the Department of Education about truancy, 9 a.m., Room 212 of the Knott Building.

— The House Agriculture & Natural Resources Appropriations Subcommittee meets for an update from the Department of Environmental Protection on the Florida Forever land conservation program, 11 a.m., Morris Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Early Learning and Elementary Education Subcommittee meets for an update from the Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability about transparency in school curricula and instruction, 11 a.m., Reed Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Professions and Public Health Subcommittee meets for an update on medical marijuana research, 11 a.m., Room 212 of the Knott Building.

— The Senate Governmental Oversight and Accountability Committee meets for an update on state fleet-management issues, 11:30 a.m., Room 37 of the Senate Office Building.

— The Senate Health Policy Committee meets to consider SB 312, from Chair Diaz Jr., to make changes in state telehealth laws, including rules on prescribing controlled substances through telehealth, 11:30 a.m., Room 412 of the Knott Building.

— The House Finance & Facilities Subcommittee meets for an update from the Agency for Health Care Administration on medical quality issues, 2 p.m., Morris Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Government Operations Subcommittee meets for an update about the role of the chief inspector general and agency inspectors general, 2 p.m., Room 404 of the House Office Building.

— The House PreK-12 Appropriations Subcommittee meets for an update on school choice programs, 2 p.m., Reed Hall of the House Office Building.

— The Senate Health and Human Services Appropriations Subcommittee will receive a report about increases in mental-health and substance-abuse funding, 2:30 p.m., Room 412 of the Knott Building.

— The Senate Transportation, Tourism and Economic Development Appropriations Subcommittee meets for an update about the Department of Transportation’s five-year work program, 2:30 p.m., Room 110 of the Senate Office Building.

— The House Congressional Redistricting Subcommittee meets for an update about redistricting law, 4 p.m., Morris Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House State Legislative Redistricting Subcommittee meets for an update about redistricting law, 4 p.m., Room 404 of the House Office Building.

— CORONA FLORIDA —

UF restricted five other professors’ participation in legal cases against the state” via Ana Ceballos and Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — Last year, four University of Florida law professors who wanted to sign a “friend of the court” brief in a lawsuit challenging a new felons’ voting law were told that they could not identify themselves as university faculty members in the filing because it involved “an action against the state.” In August, university officials told a UF professor of pediatrics that he couldn’t work on two cases challenging the state’s ban on mask mandates because participating in lawsuits against DeSantis’ administration would “create a conflict” for the university. And on Monday, UF announced that three political science professors can only provide expert testimony in a voting access case against the state if they do it without pay.

The current UF dust-up with professors is nothing new.

DeSantis and allies want credit for his boom-to-bust coronavirus numbers. But the drop is hardly unusual.” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — Supporters of DeSantis are still waiting for his apology. Weeks after Florida endured one of the worst pandemic outbreaks, the state has seen cases decline substantially, so much so that it currently ranks 50th in the country in per capita cases. DeSantis has greeted it by playing to vaccination-mandate critics and, quite arguably, to vaccine skeptics writ large. That has included elevating vaccine-skeptic Joseph Ladapo, who allied with a fringe group of doctors and recently questioned the vaccines’ safety and efficacy at a news conference, to be Florida’s surgeon general. If anything, doing that would seem to jeopardize future attempts to claim Florida as a coronavirus-combating success story.

Nikki Fried: DeSantis ‘manufactured’ vax mandate fight for ‘extremist base’” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Fried is labeling the Special Session on vaccine mandates an “extremist proxy war” for DeSantis. After beginning a news conference Tuesday with a moment of silence, Fried told reporters the Governor couldn’t even honor the nearly 60,000 Floridians who died from COVID-19 with a 60-second recognition. “It’s a disgrace for the Governor to (be) taking a victory lap when so many preventable deaths happened on his watch,” she said. Fried, the lone Democrat elected statewide and a gubernatorial candidate, denounced the Governor’s proclamation for a Special Session as his latest in a series of “taxpayer-funded stunts” to “score political points for his future presidential run.” Democrats say the Special Session could cost the state nearly $1 million.

Judge orders ‘informal remediation’ between Health Department, plaintiffs of COVID-19 data lawsuit” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — The Florida Department of Health and plaintiffs in a lawsuit seeking daily COVID-19 data that the state once published online must meet this week to clarify their wishes and potentially reach a resolution, the judge overseeing the case ordered. Judge John Cooper of the 2nd Judicial Circuit ordered Rick Figlio of law firm Ausley McMullen, representing the state, and Andrea Mogensen of the Florida Center for Government Accountability (FLCGA) to engage in “informal remediation” no later than noon Friday. Cooper did not stipulate that the two parties must reach a resolution, only that they explain to each other what their respective positions and wants are in advance of a final hearing scheduled Nov. 9-10.

Florida COVID-19 update: Where the death toll stands in your county as 2,000 new cases added” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Florida reported 2,000 COVID-19 cases and two new deaths on Monday. In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,652,637 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 59,499 deaths. On average, the state has added 81 deaths and 1,619 cases per day in the past seven days. Florida had a death rate of 277 cumulative deaths per 100,000 people since the start of the pandemic. Two weeks ago, the state had a death rate of 269 deaths per 100,000 people.

The cost of the pandemic: How Tampa Bay lost billions from COVID-19” via Jay Cridlin and Ian Hodgson of the Tampa Bay Times — What did the coronavirus cost Tampa Bay? Can you put a financial price on what we lost? Tampa Bay Times reporters surveyed eight counties: Hillsborough, Pinellas, Pasco, Hernando, Citrus, Polk, Manatee and Sarasota, home to 5 million people, about 23% of Florida’s population. It’s rough math. No formula can calculate the economic impact on a scale this severe, mainly because the numbers are still changing. But crunching the bigger numbers — using $5 trillion in government aid as a guidestar — got in the ballpark.

‘Mistaken determination’: Leon County files challenge to state fine over COVID-19 vaccine mandate” via Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat — Leon County has challenged a multimillion dollar fine leveled by the state over its vaccine mandate on county employees. The 23-page filing by attorneys with Tallahassee firm Greenberg Traurig was filed with the Florida Division of Administrative Hearings. It disputes the $3.57 million fine issued by the state’s Department of Health last month. Before that, DeSantis said he would begin fining local governments $5,000 per employee for any vaccination requirements implemented. In all, 14 county employees were fired for not being vaccinated by the Oct. 1 deadline.

Miami-Dade school district relaxes masks for high school, middle school students” via David Goodhue of the Miami Herald — After more than a year of masking their children so they could attend school amid COVID-19, parents of Miami-Dade public high school and middle school students can opt-out of the district’s mask mandate, effective immediately, district officials said Monday. “We have improved significantly. We have listened to our health experts. That is why we are relaxing these protocols,” Miami-Dade Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said at a news conference Monday afternoon. Elementary school students and students in the district’s 54 kindergarten through eighth grade schools will still have to wear masks, but that may change within weeks if COVID-19 infections, hospitalizations and deaths continue to plummet in South Florida, Carvalho said.

Miami-Dade Schools are taking masks down a notch.

Palm Beach County close to ditching mask requirements as COVID-19 cases decline” via Wells Dusenbury of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Amid a steady decline in COVID-19 cases, masks may soon become optional if you’re visiting the DMV, the tax collector’s office, or any other Palm Beach County government building. County Commissioners agreed on Tuesday to rescind their required mask-wearing inside county-operated buildings. The county, however, has yet to specify a date for when that will occur. According to CDC guidelines, that happens when the cases per 100,000 people fall below 50. Palm Beach County currently has a 59.1 weekly average, down from 96.2 a month ago. That means the order could go into effect within a few weeks if the weekly cases in Palm Beach County fall below that threshold.

— 2022 —

By the numbers: A look at Dems, GOP drops in Florida voter registration rolls” via Logan Dragone of the Orlando Sentinel — Active registered voters have dropped off from last year because of Florida’s voter roll removal rules. There were 286,721 fewer active registered voters on August 31, 2021, compared to Dec. 31, 2020, eight months. Statewide, Republican and Democrat active voters saw average decreases, and voters with no party affiliation saw a small increase of 0.35%. Democrats fared the worst from this list maintenance, losing 4.21% of their registered voters from 2020, while Republicans only lost 1.34%. One interesting outlier among all of the state’s counties is Gilchrist, which saw 17.68% less active Democrats in 2021, and 15.71% fewer voters with no party affiliation. All other counties showed less than 10% change among any party affiliation.

Florida’s redistricting process can’t intentionally favor one party, only by accident” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Much of a Tuesday meeting of the House Redistricting Committee centered around the question of what, exactly, constitutes partisan mapmaking. “It all comes back to intent,” said Andy Bardos, outside counsel from GrayRobinson, in a presentation to the Redistricting Committee. So, what can lawmakers consider? Existing boundaries like city limits and county lines have been viewed by courts as a legitimate guide for political cartographers. The same goes for rivers, roads, and railroad tracks. If a voter can easily tell what district they live in based on a landmark, that’s easier to defend in court than an arbitrary divide. The district cannot take into account the address of incumbent lawmakers, and the Legislature may end up drawing sitting members into the same jurisdictions, committee leaders warned.

If Florida redistricting favors a Party, that is completely by accident. Image via Colin Hackley.

Garrett Dennis joins race for Florida House District 13” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Dennis has joined the race for the House District 13 seat to be vacated by Rep. Tracie Davis. Dennis, who is in his second term on the Council representing the sprawling District 9, filed Monday. He joins Iris Hinton in the Democratic Primary. Hinton, a 71-year-old newcomer to elected politics, has been in the race since August but has yet to raise any money. Davis has filed to succeed term-limited Sen. Audrey Gibson in Senate District 6. Dennis won his first term in District 9, which is north and west of the St. Johns River, in 2015 and his reelection in 2019 with 60% of the vote. No Republicans ran either time in what is a strong majority Democratic district.

Lake Elections Supervisor Alan Hays to GOP election-fraud claims: ‘PUT UP OR SHUT UP!!’” via Stephen Hudak of the Orlando Sentinel — Irritated by Lake County Republican leaders who want a forensic audit of the 2020 vote and who allege the “entire election system is fraught with flaws,” Elections Supervisor Alan Hays, a longtime member of the GOP, posted a rebuttal on his official website Tuesday, demanding they “PUT UP OR SHUT UP!!” ”As an election professional, I find it disturbing that some of our citizenry continues to promote a narrative that is unsubstantiated in fact or example,” he wrote. Hays, a former state legislator, defended the elections in Florida and Lake, where he has served as supervisor since January 2017. He posted the lengthy “News Bulletin” on lakevotes.com as citizens in five Lake cities went to the polls to choose municipal leaders, including a Mayor in Mount Dora.

Now hiring — Progress Florida is seeking candidates for two upper-level roles: Digital Director and Digital Organizer. The Organizer will work closely with the Florida Communications and Research Hub, Floridians for Reproductive Freedom Coalition, and the state’s leading progressive organizations. The Director is a senior leadership position to help promote progressive values through organizing, media outreach, new and traditional communications strategies and tactics, and working with progressive groups across the state. Think you have what it takes? Get more information on responsibilities and necessary qualifications by visiting Progress Florida Digital Organizer or Digital Director.

— CORONA NATION —

U.S. gives final clearance to COVID-19 shots for kids 5 to 11” via Lauran Neergard and Mike Stobbe of The Associated Press — U.S. health officials on Tuesday gave the final signoff to Pfizer’s kid-size COVID-19 shot, a milestone that opens a major expansion of the nation’s vaccination campaign to children as young as 5. The FDA already authorized the shots for children ages 5 to 11, doses just a third of the amount given to teens and adults. But the CDC formally recommends who should receive FDA-cleared vaccines. The announcement by CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky came only hours after an advisory panel unanimously decided Pfizer’s shots should be opened to the 28 million youngsters in that age group.

Military vaccine deadline: Clash begins with troops who refuse shots” via Paul D. Shinkman of U.S. News and World Report — The Air Force had discharged 40 service members and is now preparing to address the thousands of others who failed to get a coronavirus vaccination before the Nov. 1 deadline officials imposed, becoming the first branch to execute what military leaders consider an essential protective measure but one that critics believe will undermine America’s ability to defend itself. “Now that the deadline has passed, there’s a clear line to begin holding people accountable,” Air Force spokeswoman Ann Stefanek said. The population of discharged airmen and “guardians” from the Space Force has been relatively new trainees. Almost two dozen of them were in basic training when they refused to take the vaccine, and the remaining 17 were undergoing technical training where new enlistees learn their military specialties.

Some troops are willing to battle over vaccines. Image via U.S. Army.

As U.S. reopening approaches, travelers take their marks” via Concepción de León of The New York Times — When the Biden administration announced that vaccinated foreign travelers would be allowed to enter the United States starting Nov. 8, it was as if a starting gun had been fired. Skyscanner, a travel booking site, saw an 800% spike in bookings the day after the announcement. In the week after the administration confirmed the date travelers could arrive, Expedia, the online booking site, saw a 28% increase in searches for U.S. hotels from the United Kingdom and a 24% increase from France. Experts said that the U.S. reopening signaled to American travelers that they could leave their homes this coming holiday season, too. Searches for outbound international travel on the booking application Hopper, for instance, have increased by 24% since the announcement.

— CORONA ECONOMICS —

From Boeing to Mercedes, a U.S. worker rebellion swells over vaccine mandates” via Tina Bellon and Eric M. Johnson of Reuters — The clock is ticking for companies that want to continue gaining federal contracts under an executive order by Biden, which requires all contractor employees be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by Dec. 8. The mandate has stirred protests from workers in industries across the country, as well as from Republican state officials. Opposition to the mandate could potentially lead to thousands of U.S. workers losing their jobs and imperil an already sluggish economic recovery, union leaders, workers and company executives said. More legal clashes are likely over how companies decide requests for vaccination exemptions. For the companies, time is getting tight, though the Biden administration has signaled federal contractors will not have to immediately lay off unvaccinated workers who miss the Dec. 8 deadline.

U.S. workers are poised for rebellion. Image via Reuters.

— MORE CORONA —

The big question this Thanksgiving: Are you vaccinated?“ via Christina Morales of The New York Times — Many Americans thinking about hosting or attending a bigger Thanksgiving celebration this year are considering a question that has become sensitive and often polarizing: Will they and other guests be vaccinated? In interviews, many vaccinated and unvaccinated people said they were planning to tiptoe around the subject, in some cases avoiding a meal with those they might disagree with. Others, who are immunocompromised or have children too young to be vaccinated, are grappling with how to decline invitations from unvaccinated relatives. And some hosts, worried about safety, are drawing a line.

Oh great, another thing to fight over on Thanksgiving. Image via Flickr.

Newsmax defends vaccines in rebuke of its own reporter’s ‘false claims’” via Dominick Mastrangelo of The Hill — Conservative news network Newsmax issued a pair of statements Tuesday distancing itself from “false claims” about coronavirus vaccines made by one of its correspondents. Emerald Robinson, a White House correspondent for the outlet, sent out a tweet Monday that erroneously claimed the vaccines “contain a bioluminescent marker called LUCIFERASE so that you can be tracked.” Elliot Jacobson, executive vice president and chief content officer at Newsmax, said in a statement that the network is “a strong proponent that COVID-19 vaccines are overarchingly safe and effective.” In a separate statement to The Hill on Tuesday, Newsmax reiterated that it does not believe “the vaccines contain any toxic materials or tracking markers” and noted that “such false claims have never been reported on Newsmax.”

— PRESIDENTIAL —

As Joe Biden leaves Glasgow with progress on climate change, the most important goals remain elusive.” via Dan Bilefsky of The New York Times — Biden and other world leaders left the United Nations climate change summit on Tuesday with agreements to curb emissions of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, and to end deforestation by 2030. But while the progress was notable, it still fell well short of the big prize: securing aggressive commitments to reach net-zero carbon emissions globally, to slow the rising temperatures that have led to lethal fires, floods, droughts and heat waves around the world. It also remains to be seen whether richer, polluting countries will follow through on their promises to provide $100 billion a year to help developing countries to fight global warming — a goal that John Kerry, the U.S. special climate envoy, said on Tuesday was within reach.

Joe Biden gets some gains on climate change, but the big prize is still out of reach.

— D.C. MATTERS —

House vote on Biden’s agenda imperiled by moderate Democrats” via Billy House and Erik Wasson of Bloomberg — A handful of fiscally conservative House Democrats threaten to torpedo Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s plans to vote on Biden’s $1.75 trillion economic agenda this week even as the fractious Party coalesces around deals on drug pricing and the state and local tax deduction. But with the narrowest of majorities and only three votes to spare, Pelosi’s plans for a swift vote could be scuttled by at least five Blue Dog Democrats who said they wouldn’t support the legislation without more deficit information from the Congressional Budget Office and the Joint Committee on Taxation. The Blue Dogs, which includes U.S. Rep. Stephanie Murphy, also said they want the final text of the bill “posted at least 72 hours before its consideration” so they can review the bill.

Moderates like Stephanie Murphy need more time to consider the Build Back Better plan. Image via Facebook.

Democrats add drug cost curbs to social policy plan, pushing for vote” via Jonathan Weisman and Emily Cochrane of The New York Times — House Democrats reached a deal on Tuesday to add a measure to curb prescription drug costs to Biden’s $1.85 trillion social safety net plan, agreeing to allow the government for the first time to negotiate prices for medications covered by Medicare as they pushed for a quick vote on the bill. The prescription drug deal is limited. Most drugs would still be granted patent exclusivity for nine years before negotiations could start, and more complex drugs, called biologics, would be protected for 12 years. But for the first time, Medicare would be able to step in after those periods, even if drug companies acquire patent extensions or otherwise game the patent system.

Congress hits ‘standstill’ as December shutdown, debt cliff near” via Jennifer Scholtes and Caitlin Emma of POLITICO — Government funding expires in one month, and bickering top lawmakers are already forecasting another autopilot spending bill to prevent a December shutdown. Democrats and Republicans can’t even agree on how to begin negotiations. “We’re at a standstill,” Sen. Richard Shelby said as he exited a meeting Tuesday between the two Senate appropriations leaders and their two House counterparts. It was the first “four corners” meeting of the fiscal year. “Then make an offer!” Senate Appropriations Chair Patrick Leahy retorted about his Republican counterpart’s grievances with the funding plans Democrats have offered. The next shutdown threat hits at midnight on Dec. 3, when federal cash stops flowing from the temporary spending patch Congress enacted to keep the government funded after the new fiscal year started on Oct. 1.

— CRISIS —

Tweet, tweet:

 

Sanford firefighter pleads guilty in Capitol riot case” via Desiree Stennett of the Orlando Sentinel — Sanford firefighter Andrew Williams has pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge for his role in the U.S. Capitol riot, as part of a plea deal that could put him behind bars for up to six months. Williams changed his plea at a Tuesday morning hearing. According to court documents detailing the plea agreement’s terms, the charge he pleaded to, parading, demonstrating or picketing in a Capitol building, also carries a fine of up to $5,000. His sentencing is scheduled for Jan. 27, 2022. Williams was arrested on Jan. 12, less than a week after the attempted insurrection. He was also placed on unpaid leave by the Sanford Fire Department, where he has worked since 2016.

— EPILOGUE TRUMP —

Brad Raffensperger book details Trump’s pressure to alter Georgia election” via Mark Niesse of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution — Raffensperger, Georgia’s Secretary of State, was sitting at his kitchen table with his wife when Trump called with an urgent demand: Change the election results. Details of that famous call in January are the centerpiece of Raffensperger’s book published Tuesday, “Integrity Counts.” Raffensperger’s account of the call could be used as part of ongoing criminal investigations and congressional hearings. Trump’s phone call is now being reviewed by a Fulton County grand jury to consider whether to bring charges against him that could include criminal solicitation.

Donald Trump was threatening Brad Raffensperger when he asked him to help ‘find’ enough votes to win in Georgia. Image via AP.

Trump: Until recently Israel ‘literally owned Congress’ and that was a good thing” via Ron Kampeas of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency — Trump told a conservative Jewish radio host that Israel until recently “literally owned Congress,” a claim similar to those that have triggered accusations of antisemitism against other politicians. As he discussed U.S. policy in the region, Trump pivoted to what he believed was the “biggest change” he had seen recently. He blamed the influence of a group of Democratic Congress members on the Party’s left, who have been harshly critical of Israel and have called for a reduction in U.S. defense assistance to the country. He named Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and Ilhan Omar of Minnesota.

Trump’s PAC offers ‘iconic’ Christmas wrapping paper bearing his likeness for $35+ donations” via David Caplan of 1010 WINS — With just 54 days until Christmas, Trump’s political action committee, Save America, is enticing supporters of the former President to donate more than $35 in exchange for “Official Trump Wrapping Paper.” “President Trump asked us to personally reach out to you because he wants to make sure you get our NEW Trump Gift Wrapping Paper in time for Christmas,” an email sent to supporters Monday reads. The wrapping paper is apparently an exclusive item, as well: “We haven’t released this to the general public yet, so for today ONLY you can get our iconic Trump Gift Wrapping Paper before ANYONE ELSE,” continues the plea for donations. Among those who took to the Twittersphere was retiring Republican Rep. Adam Kinzinger. “A fool and his money,” he tweeted.

Ho, ho, ho.

— STATEWIDE —

UF, seeking status in academia, is blasted by its own faculty leaders” via Divya Kumar of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida’s flagship university had attained a long-coveted spot among the nation’s academic elite, tied with two other schools for No. 5 in U.S. News & World Report’s annual ranking of public universities. Fuchs credited state leaders for the university’s ascent. But another big factor, accounting for 20% of its score, was UF’s “academic reputation” based on surveys sent to more than 4,700 academics around the nation over the previous two years. Now, leaders of the university’s own faculty, joined by other academic voices, are questioning that reputation after the school barred three of its professors from testifying for the plaintiffs in a lawsuit challenging Florida’s new voting laws.

Fried urges DEP, feds to block drilling permit — Fried sent a letter to Florida Department of Environmental Protection Secretary Shawn Hamilton and National Park Service deputy director Shawn Benge urging them to reject an oil drilling permit application submitted by Trend Exploration. Ritchie of POLITICO Florida reported that the letter asked the U.S. Department of the Interior to flex its authority in the Big Cypress watershed to block the permit. “For decades, it has been clear that oil drilling, fossil fuel exploration, hydraulic fracturing, and related processes are highly detrimental to their surrounding environments,” the letter reads. The application, submitted in March, is currently being reviewed by DEP. The department must act on the application by Nov. 7.

Oil drilling in Big Cypress? Nikki Fried says no way.

Nursing shortage hits a crisis point in Florida, and it is taking a toll, leaders say” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — In an unusual collaboration, leaders from Florida nursing homes and hospitals joined forces on Monday to report nurse staffing is at crisis levels and affecting patient care. These employers say their staff has been decimated from a combination of burnout, early retirement, and staffing agencies who recruit their workers to travel, and the result is a negative toll on the care of millions of Floridians. Employers such as nursing homes, hospitals, home health care agencies and assisted living facilities spoke out about the “crisis” during Monday’s news conference. They focused much of the blame on staffing agencies that offer nurses higher salaries and an increase in the minimum wage that caused workers to leave for other jobs.

The Magic touch: Basketball legend Magic Johnson advocates for mental health in Tallahassee” via Rory Sharrock of the Tallahassee Democrat — Johnson has lent his voice to multiple positive platforms across the globe. On Tuesday at the Historic Capitol inside the Senate Chamber, he spoke openly about the stigma of mental health during the panel event “A Discussion with Student-Athletes on Mental Health.” “Young people need us to guide them and help them,” Johnson said. Johnson spoke for over an hour, engaging with high school and college athletes about the pandemic, social media, and building strong communication bonds to counter mental health concerns.

Magic Johnson talks about mental health in Tallahassee. Image via The Workmans.

— LOCAL NOTES —

City Council, choosing ignorance, moves to keep Confederate monument on display” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — Jacksonville has come a long way in 50 years, only to end up back where it started. There is something for every kind of voter, from the most engaged to the least aware, to be hopping mad about. Three Jacksonville City Council committees this week voted against the removal of a Confederate monument in Springfield Park, virtually assuring the effort to wipe such dedications from public property, which Mayor Lenny Curry began last year, will remain a stained half-measure, abetted by a toxic mix of ignorance and indifference.

The Confederate monument in Springfield Park stays. Image via News4Jax.

Personnel note: Leeann Krieg to succeed Jordan Elsbury as Lenny Curry’s Chief of Staff — Elsbury will exit city government after seven years working in the Mayor’s office. “As Mayor, it has been an honor to have Jordan as part of my administration. His leadership ability is second to none, and his willingness to conquer any task, no matter how complex, is steadfast,” Curry said in a news release. The Mayor also announced that he had tapped Krieg, the current Director of Intergovernmental Affairs, to succeed Elsbury as Chief of Staff. Krieg has worked in City Hall for nine years, the past three of which were in the Curry administration. “Leeann has been a port in the storm during her tenure in my administration and it is with great pleasure I announce that we will continue to be working together as her role within my office expands,” Curry said.

Longtime St. Johns County Commissioner Jeb Smith resigns to serve as Farm Bureau president” via Sheldon Gardner of the St. Augustine Record — Smith resigned at Tuesday’s County Commission meeting to serve as the Florida Farm Bureau president. Smith was first elected in 2014 and served in the District 2 seat, which includes much of rural St. Johns County. DeSantis will appoint someone to serve out the remainder of Smith’s term, and the seat is up for election in 2022. So far, one person has filed to run for the spot: LaShawnda Pinkney, a West Augustine resident and human resources generalist with the City of St. Augustine. Delegates at the 2021 Florida Farm Bureau Annual Meeting elected Smith to serve a two-year term as president of the organization.

Medley Councilwoman charged with stealing food donated to local football legend’s charity” via David Ovalle and Charles Rabin of the Miami Herald — For years, Medley councilwoman Ana Lilia Stefano ran the Santana Moss Foundation, a charity established by the former University of Miami and NFL star. But prosecutors say that unbeknown to Moss, she used the foundation as her own piggy bank, accepting food donations before turning around and selling them. And that’s not all; investigators believe she used a sizable chunk of money from the foundation’s bank account to gamble at the Miccosukee and Seminole casinos. Stefano surrendered to police on Tuesday, charged with an organized scheme to defraud and felony grand theft. She was jailed at the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center and posted bond to await trial.

‘Let’s go Brandon’: Second banner joins ‘Trump Won’ banner on Seagrove Beach house” via Jim Thompson of Northwest Florida Daily News — Just as he said he would, Marvin Peavy has installed a second massive politically conservative-themed banner on his House along Walton County Road 30A. The latest banner, reading “Let’s go, Brandon,” went up Saturday, and like the “Trump Won” banner that preceded it, stretches down three stories of the Georgia businessman’s House, where he lives four days each week. Also, like the “Trump Won” banner, the “Let’s go Brandon” banner — the phrase is a euphemism for “F*** Joe Biden” — could get Peavy another citation and potentially more daily $50 fines for violating Walton County land development code provisions prohibiting certain types of signage on properties immediately adjacent to CR 30A under its local designation as a scenic corridor.

Marvin Peavy doubles down.

Disney’s Lake Nona move means big gains for company but likely staff losses, too” via Katie Rice of the Orlando Sentinel — Disney’s move cements Central Florida’s status as the center of the theme park world, industry professionals say, and the local economy is already seeing signs of growth because of the relocation fueled in part by $570 million in state tax breaks. But it also signals a huge transition for Disney’s operations, and some workers will likely stay behind in California. Disney is providing support and relocation assistance to employees whose jobs are moving. Those who choose not to relocate might not necessarily lose their employment with the company, as Disney is working with people on an individual basis to look for other internal opportunities. The company has not stated the specific number of positions moving to Lake Nona, but the jobs make up less than 5% of The Walt Disney Co.’s California staffing.

Video platform Rumble announces HQ move to Sarasota County” via Jay Cridlin of the Tampa Bay Times — Rumble, an online video hosting service that has become a major platform for conservatives and right-wing media figures, including Trump, is coming to Tampa Bay. The company announced Thursday that it’s relocating its U.S. headquarters from New York to Longboat Key, near Sarasota, and plans to invest $50 million in the state in the coming years. Founded in Toronto in 2013, the platform has exploded in popularity of late among online conservatives. Rumble hosts channels run by popular right-wing figures like Sean Hannity and Charlie Kirk, as well as pop-culture figures like Dr. Drew Pinsky.

County slams door on island incorporation” via David Adlerstein of The Apalachicola Times — By a unanimous vote, Franklin County Commissioners rejected a request from a member of the working group that advocates for incorporation to place a nonbinding referendum on the August 2022 Primary ballot, for a vote open to all residents of the island. Shannon Bothwell, one of the members of the St. George Island Citizen Working Group, said that while such a “straw poll” vote is not mandated by the statutory requirement for incorporation, it would come at no cost to voters. Rep. Jason Shoaf had asked for such a vote before he would back a bill in the Florida Legislature in spring 2023 that would allow for a formal, binding referendum on incorporation by island voters sometime after that.

— TOP OPINION —

Joe Henderson: OK, Welch, you won, so whaddya got?” via Florida Politics — Congratulations are in order for Welch, the man St. Petersburg voters resoundingly selected as their city’s next Mayor. OK, enough with the congratulations. It’s showtime, Mr. Mayor-to-be. Whaddya got? Got a plan to keep the Rays at least in the Bay area? Let’s hear it. What’s your answer about what to do with Tropicana Field? What will you do about the skyrocketing rental rates? Sure, you’ll have plenty of problems to solve, and it’s different when it’s your call. Not everything you have to do will be popular, but that’s how they play the game. Don’t forget that the people picked you. You won because they trust you to make things better. Do your best to prove them right.

— OPINIONS —

A Special Session for DeSantis to run against Biden” via Randy Schultz of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Perhaps Florida’s new surgeon general wrote the proclamation for the Legislature’s Special Session on vaccine mandates. Ladapo, who (at least on paper) has a medical degree, is a COVID-19 vaccine skeptic who also claims that masks don’t reduce virus spread. One paragraph in the proclamation, which came from the Governor’s office, lies about masks and attempts to rewrite history. Florida did offer in-person learning when schools reopened in August 2020. But most students were taking classes remotely. DeSantis and Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran could have worked with school districts on reopening safely. Instead, they just badgered them. There was no great “success.”

UF’s attack on academic freedom exposes a partisan agenda” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — The University of Florida has put the interests of DeSantis and the chairman of its board of trustees above the values of an institution dedicated to free inquiry, and it has been desperately trying to cram toothpaste back into a tube ever since. Three UF political science professors, all experts on voting, especially in Florida, had been hired by voting rights organizations suing the DeSantis administration over a new state law (SB 90) that includes new restrictions on drop boxes, voting by mail and other Republican-sponsored measures designed to make it harder to vote in Florida.

Silenced Florida professors must be allowed to testify” via James Fahey for the Orlando Sentinel — In response to the new elections law, a coalition of voting-rights groups sued the state in May — and to make their case, they sought the expert testimony of three professors in my department. UF denied their request to testify. In a statement explaining their decision, UF said they simply denied them the ability to “ … undertake paid work that is adverse to the university’s interests as a state of Florida institution.” Yet this is a distinction without a difference. UF and the Governor’s office are independent entities — the university is not a spoil to be won by whoever’s Party controls the levers in Tallahassee. What is best for DeSantis is not necessarily what is best for UF.

Redrawing Florida’s legislative districts should be done in public” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — There are few things voters have a greater vested interest in than legislative districts. Those lines and boundaries have a profound impact on political parties gaining and keeping power, candidates at all levels getting a fair shot and overall election fairness. So, there’s ample reason the maps and documents related to the once-in-a-decade process of redrawing legislative boundaries should be open under Florida’s public records law. Lawmakers should kill the current exemption that shields those records from public scrutiny. Democrats controlled the Legislature way back in 1993 when the public records exemption was carved out. Voters had recently approved a state constitutional amendment expanding Florida’s public records law. But lawmakers also got to write their own rules and exemptions to that law.

Alix Miller: This ain’t your grandaddy’s truck — time to redefine image of trucking” via Florida Politics — We have all heard about the truck driver shortage. Today, we need 80,000 drivers to fuel the current supply chain. In 10 years, we will need 1.1 million new drivers to replace retiring workers and meet consumer demands. We’ve got companies at the forefront of automated and electric vehicles battling to be the market leaders. Every year, trucking companies invest billions in advanced safety technologies in trucks to keep the driver and all motorists safe on our roads. These innovations won’t make truck drivers obsolete — but it does make it easier and safer to be a professional driver. The trucking industry is adapting to a rapidly changing business landscape, which means great opportunities for the next generation entering the field.

The job facing St. Petersburg Mayor-elect Welch” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — Welch’s election Tuesday as St. Petersburg’s next Mayor marks a new era for the Tampa Bay region. Welch needs to use his historic victory as a springboard to act, on housing, transportation, downtown development, and other major issues that define the metro area. He has the experience, local ties and connections to succeed. But voters also want to see a greater sense of urgency at City Hall and a more open governing style. The St. Petersburg native and five-term Pinellas County Commissioner handily defeated City Council member Robert Blackmon. With his victory, the son of the first Black man on St. Petersburg’s City Council has become St. Petersburg’s first Black Mayor, creating history himself in a city with a beleaguered history on race.

We have high hopes for Christine King on Miami Commission; Joe Carollo, not so much” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Carollo is back on the dais, bombast, bullying and all. Predictably, he bested three opponents to regain the seat. He didn’t want the Editorial Board’s recommendation, and we didn’t give it to him. And it’s a waste of time to give him any of our advice now. It’s no surprise King beat six other candidates, including incumbent Jeffrey Watson. King is backed by County Commissioner and previous District 5 Commissioner Keon Hardemon, whose family has dominated local politics for years. That connection seems to have paid off, with her raising a whopping $325,000, more than all the other candidates combined.

— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —

Agriculture Commissioner Fried is calling Gov. DeSantis’ Special Session a taxpayer-funded political stunt.

Also, on today’s Sunrise:

— VISIT FLORIDA funding requests sails through their first committee stop.

— And NBA legend Johnson made a return visit to Florida’s Capitol to tackle the topic of mental health.

To listen, click on the image below:

— ALOE —

Expressway Authority seeks 300 drivers to test crash-avoiding technology in Tampa” via C.T. Bowen of the Tampa Bay Times — The Tampa Hillsborough Expressway Authority is seeking volunteers as part of a $21 million research project intended to help reduce traffic crashes in the vicinity of downtown Tampa and elsewhere. Motorists who drive vehicles manufactured by Honda, Acura, Hyundai, Kia, or Toyota are being sought to test so-called connected vehicle technology. The equipped autos will use wireless communications to “talk” to other connected vehicles and roadside detectors to help avoid traffic crashes. The research is intended to document the safety, mobility, and environmental effects of connected vehicle technology. Tampa is one of three sites deploying the technology as part of a U.S. Department of Transportation program.

— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —

Happy birthday to Rep. Susan Valdes, former Rep. Delores Hogan JohnsonClay Barker, Nicole Kelly of The Southern Group, Capital City Consulting’s Kenny Granger, and former Sen. Jack Latvala.

___

Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter SchorschPhil AmmannRenzo Downey and Drew Wilson.


5.) MORNING BREW

November 03, 2021
Morning Brew

Good morning and happy National Sandwich Day.

There’s a tremendous amount of debate around whether a hot dog is a sandwich, with solid points made on both sides. But you know what’d be better? If we just let the hot dog make up its own mind.

Max Knoblauch, Jamie Wilde, Neal Freyman

MARKETS

Nasdaq

15,649.60

S&P

4,630.65

Dow

36,052.63

10-Year

1.553%

Bitcoin

$62,972.23

UA

$25.60

*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 6:00pm ET. Here’s what these numbers mean.
  • Markets: The Dow closed above 36,000 for the first time, and the other two major indexes notched records as investors prep for a big announcement from the Fed today. Any sweat Under Armour had over the past few years is fully wicked; it hiked its outlook and investors are feeling good about the apparel brand’s turnaround.
  • Elections: Former private equity CEO Glenn Youngkin, a Republican, defeated Democrat Terry McAuliffe in Virginia’s closely watched gubernatorial race, while New Jersey’s remains too close to call. Here’s a list of all the important results from Election Day.

BIG TECH

Forget You Ever Tagged Me

A tablet surrounded by loose wires shows a glitching facial scan on the screen.Francis Scialabba

Facebook is shutting down its decade-old facial recognition software, the company announced yesterday. As part of the change, the newly minted Meta will delete the facial scan data of more than 1 billion users from its social network.

The technology, introduced in December 2010, automatically recognizes the identity of people in photos and videos and suggests that users tag them. Before that, if you recall, we had to tag people in images ourselves or (if you can believe) leave a photo untagged altogether and suffer the consequences of fewer likes.

What’s changing:

  • Users’ faces will no longer be recognized in photos, videos, or Memories on Facebook. Tagging is still possible, but it will have to be done manually.
  • Users who have opted in to the technology will have their templates deleted.

In a blog post, Meta’s VP of Artificial Intelligence Jerome Pesenti cited a lack of clear regulation by the government and “concerns about the place of facial recognition technology in society” as the main reasons behind the company’s decision.

What concerns?

How much time do you have? What initially seemed like an innocuous feature to save you precious seconds while you dropped apple picking albums on the timeline has become a highly controversial technology seen by critics as a privacy nightmare. The ACLU calls facial recognition tech an unprecedented threat that “gives governments, companies, and individuals the power to spy on us wherever we go.”

There’s also the issue of algorithmic bias. An MIT study of facial analysis software showed an error rate of 0.8% in the identification of light-skinned men, but that jumps to 34.7% for dark-skinned women.

Zoom out: Despite heavy investments by tech giants, facial recognition has suffered some major setbacks. Last year, Amazon, Microsoft, and IBM announced they would stop selling facial recognition software to police departments, who have come under scrutiny for using the technology to identify protesters. And Baltimore, Portland, and New York City have begun regulating private and public sector use of biometric data like face scans.—MK

            

REAL ESTATE

Zillow Leaves Home-Flipping to the Property Brothers

Zillow’s home-flipping business is a flop. The online real estate company said yesterday it’s shutting down the unit and reducing its overall workforce by 25%.

Why? “We’ve determined the unpredictability in forecasting home prices far exceeds what we anticipated,” CEO Rich Barton said. In other words, what happened in the Excel spreadsheet didn’t translate to real life…

Zillow Offers, the company’s algorithmic home-buying business, lost $381 million last quarter.

And its demise wasn’t exactly a shock:

  • Over two weeks ago, Zillow said it would stop buying homes for the remainder of 2021 because it didn’t have the bandwidth to work its way out of a backlog.
  • Earlier this week, an analyst pointed out that 66% of the homes Zillow bought were listed below their purchase price.

Looking ahead…Zillow also said yesterday that it has 9,800 homes it still needs to sell, and an additional 8,200 beyond those it’s already in contract to purchase (and would then need to flip). It expects to lose 5%–7% on those sales.—JW

            

AUTO

Rental Car Madness

A sign is posted in front of an Avis rental car officeJustin Sullivan/Getty Images

Seriously—what in the $31 per day liability charge is going on in the rental car industry? It’s bananas.

Let’s start with Avis. Shares in the car rental company blasted 108% higher yesterday. The heavily shorted stock had to be halted at least 11 times for investors to catch their breath, and the volume of shares traded was 15x more than last month’s levels.

We’ve been down this road enough times before to know a meme stock when we see one. Sure enough, the surge appears to be driven by individual traders, who posted about Avis on r/WallStreetBets with the same frequency as GameStop and Tesla. They were apparently jazzed about a comment by Avis’s CEO earlier in the day, when he said the company would play a “big role” in the adoption of electric cars.

Speaking of Tesla…

Remember its deal with Hertz for 100,000 EVs? The one that propelled Tesla’s market cap past $1 trillion? That’s also devolved into chaos. Elon Musk tweeted on Monday night that “no contract has been signed yet” with Hertz for those vehicles, which sent its stock down 3% yesterday. But a Hertz spokesperson said Tesla deliveries had already started.

We’ll leave it to the SEC to sort this one out.—NF

            

TOGETHER WITH MANSCAPED

The Ultimate Package for Your, Ahem, Package

Manscaped

You need the right tools to get a job done correctly. And while the words ‘lawn mower’ and ‘weed whacker’ may be on any gardening enthusiast’s holiday wishlist, the gardening we’re referring to is the personal kind that occurs below the belt.

With gift-giving season around the corner, consider The Performance Package 4.0 by MANSCAPED—it’s their newest all-in-one grooming kit designed with precision and hygiene in mind. Must-haves include:

  • The All-New SkinSafe Lawn Mower 4.0
  • The Weed Whacker nose and ear-hair trimmer
  • Crop Preserver anti-chafing deodorant

And right now, MANSCAPED is giving Morning Brew readers an exclusive trim on pricing with 20% off The Performance Package, plus anti-chafing boxers and a travel bag for free. From head to jingle bells, personal grooming has never been easier.

Use code BELLS20 for 20% off and free shipping for a limited time.

GRAB BAG

Key Performance Indicators

Stat: Pfizer expects its Covid-19 vaccine, which it developed in partnership with BioNTech, to bring in at least $65 billion in revenue in 2021 and 2022. With $36 billion in revenue projected this year alone, Pfizer’s Covid vaccine would set the record for the single-best year for a medical product…ever.

Quote: “Facebook brought a lot of joy to my face.”

Metta World Peace, the retired NBA player formerly known as Ron Artest, told MarketWatch he was ecstatic to hear that Facebook changed its name to Meta Platforms. What is World Peace even up to these days? It’s actually pretty cool—he started a company whose app allows basketball players in underserved communities to book time at high-quality indoor courts.

Read: Google’s map of our lives. (The Guardian)

            

TECH

Come On In. The Metaverse Is Fine.

An avatar in a Teams meetingMicrosoft

Companies are jumping into the metaverse like they’re being chased by a swarm of bees. Last week, Facebook reemerged as Meta in order to emphasize its metaverse ambitions, and yesterday…

  • Microsoft said that it’s adding virtual reality avatars and workplaces to Teams, its web meeting service. The new capability mimics a Facebook virtual reality product called Horizon Workrooms.
  • Nike filed seven trademark applications for virtual sneakers and apparel. It has dipped a toe into the space before by selling Nike-branded items in Fortnite and on the Roblox gaming platform.

Big picture: Companies, in the tech sector or otherwise, are starting to see real $$$ in metaverse products, or at the very least they want to cover their assets for the possibility that the metaverse is, as Mark Zuckerberg put it, “the next chapter for the internet.”

Looking ahead…Jensen Huang, the CEO of Nvidia, which makes graphics cards that can support virtual experiences, said, “The top companies in the next few years are going to be based on connected worlds.”—JW

            

WHAT ELSE IS BREWING

  • The Atlanta Braves defeated the Houston Astros to win the World Series. Now bring on the robot umps.
  • The CDC gave its official thumbs-up to Pfizer’s vaccine for children ages 5–11. Shots can be administered as early as today.
  • COP26 updates: The US and EU announced a plan, signed by 100+ countries, to cut methane emissions 30% by 2030. And at least 105 countries pledged to reverse deforestation.
  • John Deere workers who are striking will…continue striking after voting down a tentative agreement.
  • Maersk, the largest container shipping company in the world, just posted its most profitable quarter in its 117-year history.

BREW’S BETS

Will that be cash, credit, or…? This holiday season, there’s a better way to pay. lets you split the cost of your purchase into manageable biweekly or monthly payments. Pay at your own pace when you shop at , , and nearly 29,000 top merchants.*

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Get hype: Need to give someone (or yourself) a pep talk? Try this generator.

New Twitch category: Animals, aquariums, and zoos. Much cuteness.

New acronym alert: CX, or customer experience. Learn all about what that means and how retailers should approach their relationship with customers at Retail Brew’s virtual event next week. Register here.

*This is sponsored advertising content

FROM THE CREW

It’s Hoodie Season

A GIF saying "hoodie season" promo-ing Brew merch

It’s our favorite time of year—hoodie season. And this hoodie season is the best one yet because you can now rock these cozy WFH wardrobe staples while repping your favorite newsletter.

Shop the Hoodies

GAMES

The Puzzle Section

Word Search: Take a trip to the international box office to identify foreign movie posters. Play the Word Search here.

Sandwich Trivia

Had to do it on National Sandwich Day. Here’s the question: Which of the following sandwiches traditionally contain pickles?

Your options: McDonald’s Big Mac, lobster roll, the Cuban sandwich, Philly cheesesteak, Burger King Whopper, Chick-fil-A’s Chicken Sandwich, Greek gyro

ANSWER

The Big Mac, the Cuban, Burger King Whopper, and Chick-fil-A’s Chicken Sandwich

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6.) THE FACTUAL

3 NOV 2021

The Factual

Facts, not fear.

TRENDING TOPICS
Gubernatorial elections • City elections • Ethiopia’s widening war • Facebook drops facial recognition • Child vaccination campaign
FEATURED UNDER-REPORTED STORIES
Menopause awareness • Latin America’s rebound threatened • US nuclear arsenal
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TRENDING TOPICS, MOST CREDIBLE STORIES
#1 in U.S. News • 217 articles

Who are the winners of gubernatorial races in Virginia and New Jersey?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    Youngkin inches ahead in tight Virginia governor’s race.
    Politico (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 77% • 5 min read

    Republican Glenn Youngkin’s lead reflected gains throughout the state compared to recent Virginia elections. Not only did Youngkin build further on blowout Republican margins in smaller, rural counties, he also cut into the edge Democrats built in Virginia’s diverse and heavily populated suburbs. President Biden carried Virginia by 10 points [in 2020].

    That’s despite the state’s overall blue tint — but in line with decades of political history, in which the party that wins the White House in the preceding election almost always loses the next year’s gubernatorial race. Though it is an election to state office, the race is seen as a key bellwether halfway between Biden’s 2020 victory, and the crucial midterm elections next November.

    Democrats are also fighting to maintain control of the lower chamber of the state legislature. Also on the ballot Tuesday is New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, whose bid for reelection is considered safer than Democrats’ hold on the governor’s office in Virginia.
  1. Highly-rated – last 2 hrs
    Votes are coming in for New Jersey’s governor race: live updates.
    NPR (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 77% • 4 min read
  1. Selected long-read
    Virginia’s governor race is an education policy wake-up call that Democrats (and the media) won’t heed.
    Reason (Moderate Right) • Factual Grade 70% • 5 min read

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#2 in U.S. News • 21 articles

How are voters weighing in on city elections where crime is a key issue?

If the ballot question had received majority support, the mayor and City Council would have been directed to replace the Minneapolis Police Department with a new Departm…
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TODAY’S POLL

Should some police department funds be reallocated to community services?

All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PDT

YESTERDAY’S POLLIs lack of funding the main reason for world hunger?

401 votes, 58 comments

Context: Elon Musk challenges calls for him to donate $6 billion to UN food program.

HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS

 No – You can throw all the money in the world at a problem’s symptoms, and not solve the root cause. Unfortunately, most programs supporting the poor have lots of management layers, employees that suck their middle-class subsistence from that stream of funding for the poor, and then the cash/aid/goods ends up in the hands of a kleptocracy at the far end, further diverting the aid from the poor (their own governments compound the problems of poverty).

 Unsure – This is a poorly worded question. Would funding help feed hungry people? Obviously. Was everyone once not…

 Yes – How else could world hunger be solved? It can only be with tho…

#1 in World News • 17 articles

Why is Ethiopia declaring a state of emergency?

The government Tuesday declared a six-month state of emergency and local officials in Addis Ababa urged the capital’s 5 million residents to register their weapons…
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#1 in Business News • 47 articles

Why is Facebook ending its facial recognition system?

Facebook introduced facial recognition in 2010, allowing users to automatically tag people in photos. It also added a user’s name automatically to an image’s alt text, which describes the content…
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#1 in Health News • 96 articles

How many parents will choose to vaccinate their children against Covid-19?

The recommendation, which passed by a 14-0 vote, was approved a couple of hours later by CDC Director Rochelle Walensky. The Pfizer vaccine for children 5…
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Dems Face Crisis of the Soul as Youngkin Wins Virginia Governor Race
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Old Dominion results give Democrats a rude awakening.

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“What happens in Virginia will in large part determine what happens in 2022, 2024, and on.”

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Cities across America give mixed reviews to anti-police proposals.

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Socialist policies rejected as moderates and conservatives steal the show in major races.

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8.) FOX NEWS

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Fox News Wednesday, November 03, 2021
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Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …

Youngkin wins Virginia governor’s race with shocking victory over Democrat McAuliffe
Republican Glenn Youngkin shocked the political world in Virginia on Tuesday night, defeating former Democratic Gov. Terry McAuliffe in an election with national implications that McAuliffe was once expected to win.

“Alrighty, Virginia. We won this thing!” Youngkin told supporters at his victory party a little after 1 a.m. ET Wednesday.

Youngkin ran a disciplined campaign, focusing on taxes, crime, and holding public schools accountable to parents, while McAuliffe spent much of his fire power the past couple of months trying to link Youngkin to former President Donald Trump.

McAuliffe also nationalized the race, campaigning with President Biden, Vice President Harris, former President Obama, and other top Democrats in an unsuccessful attempt to boost his fortunes.

Two months ago, McAuliffe held a mid-single-digit lead in a state that Biden won by 10 points over Trump just a year ago, but Youngkin erased the former governor’s advantage in the closing stretch of the campaign. CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.

 

In other developments:
– Biden, Obama, Harris all strike out for McAuliffe in Virginia
– Youngkin congratulated by top Republicans, including Pence, Paul, Cotton, Haley
– Critical race theory top factor for 25% of Virginia voters, while 72% called it important: Fox analysis
– Virginia moms and dads say Youngkin victory a win for parental rights
– Virginia governor-elect Youngkin’s economic plan includes lower taxes, less regulation
– Virginia parents send clear message to Democrats: This nonsense isn’t acceptable anymore

New Jersey Republican makes it a race against favored Dem incumbent: Too close to call
The race for governor in New Jersey remained too close to call early Wednesday as Gov. Phil Murphy’s Republican challenger Jack Ciattarelli clung to a slight lead.

The two waged tense campaigns with Murphy presenting himself as a solid progressive. Ciattarelli tried to paint Murphy as out of touch with the average voter and was critical of his leadership during the COVID-19 epidemic.

The campaigns ended their Election Night parties without either claiming victory, NJ.com reported. Both struck optimistic tones with their supporters.

“We’ve sent a message to the entire nation. This is what I love about this state: Every single time it’s gone too far off track, the people of this state have pushed, pulled and prodded it right back to where it needs to be,” Ciattarelli said.

Murphy has been leading in the polls, has a 1 million-voter registration advantage and had more cash in his campaign coffers than Ciattarelli in the final days of the race.

“We’re all sorry that tonight cannot yet be the celebration we wanted it to be,” Murphy said, according to the paper. “But when every vote is counted-and every vote willbe counted-we hope to have a celebration.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE.

In other developments:
– Gov. Murphy positioned as ‘canary in a coal mine’ for Democrat policies: ‘We’re doing what they’re discussing’
– VIDEO: New Jersey governor’s election was supposed to be a blowout: ‘No one expected this’
– Phil Murphy: What to know about New Jersey governor
– Jack Ciattarelli: What to know about New Jersey gubernatorial candidate

Braves win World Series thanks to power, pitching in Game 6
The Atlanta Braves fought through injuries, a tough National League East, a stacked playoff bracket and the best team in the American League – but on Tuesday night they called themselves World Series champions.

()

For the first time since 1995, the Braves won baseball’s Fall Classic with a Game 6 rout of the Houston Astros 7-0. The Braves won the series 4-2.

Atlanta, much like in Game 5, started off strong. Jorge Soler came up in the third inning with two outs and Ozzie Albies and Eddie Rosario on base. He battled with Houston starting pitcher Luis Garcia in an eight-pitch at-bat that ended with a moon shot to left field and over the train tracks at Houston’s Minute Maid Park.

The home run put the Braves up three runs and the team never looked back. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.

In other developments:
– Braves pennant win prompts GOP’s Brian Kemp to jab at Stacey Abrams, MLB over Atlanta All-Star snub
– Trump joins Braves fans in ‘tomahawk chop’ during World Series Game 4
– Late innings = late nights as World Series games lengthen
– MLB pitchers may have batted for the final time in World Series Game 5

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TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– NYC mayoral election: Democrat Eric Adams soundly defeats Republican Curtis Sliwa
– Southern California city would have highest minimum wage in country under proposal
– Prior COVID-19 infection does not protect as well as vaccine against reinfection: CDC
– Alec Baldwin shares comment slamming ‘bulls—‘ claims of poor working conditions on ‘Rust’
– California school board votes to bring police back to school campuses following ‘defund’ movement

THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– US stock buybacks head for record in third quarter
– Zillow quits home-flipping business, cites inability to forecast prices
– Deere employees reject contract offer, will stay on strike
– Kroger, Bed Bath & Beyond team up stock surges
– Biden falsely claims wages rising faster than inflation

 

SOME PARTING WORDS

Sean Hannity reminded viewers Tuesday night although President Biden won Virginia by 10 points, he is now “underwater in Virginia by nearly 10 points. That is a 20-point swing.”

The “Hannity” host said that swing “could be a referendum on the deeply unpopular Joe Biden and his administration. As we speak, Democrats all across the country are panicking. According to exit polls, the economy was the top issue for Virginia voters and the economy is in an historic state of chaos.

“But tonight, Democrats may be in for a rude awakening – calling everyone a racist, blaming Donald Trump for everything,” he said. “Well, it might not be the winnable strategy. They thought it would be.”

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Game-Changing New Video of Rittenhouse Shooting Could Be Key to His Defense
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Seconds After Baldwin Shot Her, Halyna Hutchins Told Coworker This
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Seconds after Baldwin drew a gun and fired at her, the young cinematographer said what is thought to be her final words. Read more…
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Sheriff Gives Huge Update on Death of Brian Laundrie
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Another development in the story that has shocked the nation. Read more…
Antifa Officially Declared a ‘Global Terrorist Organization’
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Joe Biden would never dare say this. Read more…
Trump Has Perfect Response to Biden’s Climate Conference Nap
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‘Nobody that has true enthusiasm and belief in a subject will ever fall asleep!’ Read more…
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11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE

AEI’s daily publication of independent research, insightful analysis, and scholarly debate.
Can either party set priorities?
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The failure to prioritize is a thoroughly bipartisan problem now. The first party to recognize it and find a way to overcome it — the first party to recover its ability to engage in traditional politics — could own the next few years.
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Attitudes about abortion: A comprehensive review of polls from the 1970s to today
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Polls on abortion reveal substantial continuity over a 50-year period, but opinion is complex. On the two major questions that have been asked for decades, opinion bulks in the middle.
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Climate change and agriculture: What is the role of policy?
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Normal on-farm adaptations of farm practices, combined with research and development of new farming methods and resilient crop varieties, have reduced the impacts of a changing climate on agricultural production.
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Education bureaucrats have declared war on Asian American achievement
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Progressive school officials, inflamed with a newfound commitment to racial justice, are loosening admissions standards at the most competitive schools and watering down objective measures such as test scores in favor of more subjective criteria to get the “right balance” of racial groups in the classroom.
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Biden’s tax credits benefit nonworkers most
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Through boom and bust, China’s economy matters
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Is Prince Charles becoming Britain’s Pol Pot?
Michael Rubin | Washington Examiner
The dissident’s dilemma
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France plays Biden like a fiddle
Michael Rubin | Washington Examiner
Nurses aren’t like iPhones
Elisabeth Braw | Foreign Policy
Questioning the climate science orthodoxy in Glasgow
Michael Rubin | Washington Examiner
When it comes to gray-zone threats, China overshadows Russia
Elisabeth Braw | Baltic Rim Economies
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US emergency food aid programs: In the current COVID-19 global environment, commonsense reforms are overdue
Christopher Barrett and Vincent H. Smith | American Enterprise Institute
‘Karachi Vice’ review: The city as a jigsaw puzzle
Tunku Varadarajan | The Wall Street Journal
The danger of social media business models
Peter J. Wallison | The Hill
The amendment that remade America
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‘Let’s go, Brandon’ is what passes for oratory now. Be worried.
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12.) THE FLIP SIDE

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Wednesday, November 3, 2021

Virginia Governor’s Election

Glenn Youngkin won the Virginia governor’s race early Wednesday, tapping into culture war fights over schools and race to unite former President Donald Trump’s most fervent supporters with enough suburban voters to become the first Republican to win statewide office here in a dozen years.” AP News

Here’s our previous coverage of the raceThe Flip Side

From the Left

The left laments McAuliffe’s loss, and urges Democrats to govern effectively and change tactics on cultural issues.
“Terry McAuliffe, a lifelong Democratic operative, is not a generational political talent.  But Washington also didn’t give McAuliffe much material to work with. As I write, we are on month… 3… 4… 17?…of congressional Democrats saying they’ll pass a monumental pair of bills any day now…

“[Meanwhile] Republicans in Virginia, and Washington, recognized the anguish schooling brought parents during the pandemic, and worked backwards from there… McAuliffe’s biggest misstep of the campaign may have come in a late September debate when he said the words, ‘I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.’… It’s impossible to know which combination of these factors finally did Terry McAuliffe in.”
Jim Newell, Slate

“On the one hand, there are clear and compelling arguments to be made for teaching kids very directly about the nation’s scarred past. Texas children ought to know that the original constitution of the Republic of Texas protected slavery and barred Indians and ‘Africans’ from becoming citizens. New York children ought to learn that suburban developments barred Black people from buying homes. This is not ‘critical race theory’ — an academic concept not taught in elementary or high schools. It’s just history…

“But some of the premises of that theory have in fact gained currency — for instance, the idea that certain widely admired attributes are rooted in ‘whiteness.’ It’s not hard to pump up the fears of conservative or moderate white suburban parents that such a critique amounts to an attack on some basic, and seemingly colorblind, American values…

“If Democrats believe that the passage of an infrastructure program and a large social spending bill will provide the ammunition to repel a new GOP-launched culture war, they are deluding themselves. If you weigh the concerns of parents with their kids’ education against a subsidy for electric cars, or a better rail system some years down the line, the scales will tip pretty heavily to one side.”
Jeff Greenfield, Politico

Others note that “while Youngkin used the specter of critical race theory to appeal to the base, his TV ads aimed at swing voters had a broader focus. In those, Youngkin conveyed concern about the state of the economy and the state’s education system more broadly…

“The result certainly looks grim for Democrats, but its importance can be overstated. If Vermont (Biden +36), Massachusetts (Biden +33), and Maryland (Biden +33) can elect Republican governors, and Kentucky (Trump +36) and Louisiana (Trump +19) can elect Democratic governors — and they all currently have them — then surely it’s not all that strange that Virginia (Biden +10) can elect a Republican. Virginia gets outsized attention because there are hardly any other high-profile contests in the November after a presidential race.”
Andrew Prokop, Vox

From the Right

The right celebrates Youngkin’s win, seeing it as a blueprint for GOP success in 2022.
“The fact that parental rights in education became a central campaign issue shows that populism is still a potent element in U.S. politics. And in the Republican Party, even with Trump out of the White House, populism — not conservatism — remains the GOP’s principal identity… Tuesday’s result provides more evidence that Biden’s win last year had more to do with Trump fatigue than a rejection of Trumpian policies…

“In future elections, not every Republican will be lucky enough to have an opponent say aloud that parents should stay out of decisions involving their children’s education. Instead, Republicans will have to rely on the rest of the Youngkin blueprint, which is particularly applicable in swing states: Embrace Trump’s populism and many of his programs, while keeping the man himself in the background.”
Gary Abernathy, Washington Post

“Most Republican parents are supportive of students being taught about America’s complicated and often ugly past. They are supportive of teaching about a more diverse array of stories and historical figures and favor giving a more complete picture of the good and the bad these figures did in their lives…

“Some 77% of Republicans and 96% of Democrats alike agreed that ‘we should acknowledge the terrible things that have happened in our nation’s history regarding race so students can learn from them and make the future better.’ To be sure, parents are divided and alarmed over anything that seems to be deterministic about race, such as telling children their skin color will shape their future…

“But they are also alarmed by the learning loss that happened during the year that children were kept out of the classroom, worried about the effect of taking school resource officers out of public schools, upset over efforts to gut Gifted & Talented education, and, as a result, want to have more say and choice in their child’s education. That’s not just ‘critical race theory,’ and dismissing all concerns around educational quality as code for a debate over race won’t serve Democrats well.”
Kristen Soltis Anderson, Washington Examiner

“Incredibly enough, Youngkin improved on Trump’s margins in rural areas, and the exit polls showed him besting Trump among white women without a college education. On top of this, he made gains in all geographic areas of the state. The result suggests that the party’s grip on rural areas and small towns may be enduring even without Trump on the ballot, whereas the scale of the losses in the suburbs was a reaction to Trump himself…

“Youngkin’s win, and the other wreckage around the map for Democrats, presumably makes passing Joe Biden’s reconciliation bill even harder and signals a bleak midterm election cycle ahead for Democrats. But his victory could be most significant in showing a path ahead for the GOP.”
The Editors, National Review

On the bright side…

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13.) AXIOS

Axios AM

🗳️Happy Wednesday! Election Day continues in New Jersey, where the governor’s race is uncalled. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,193 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.

1 big thing: Brutal blow for Biden, Dems
Featured image

Split screen shows President Biden returning from Europe at the same moment Republican Glenn Youngkin was giving a victory speech in Virginia. Screenshot: CNN

Last night’s results sent a grim message to President Biden and Democrats:

  • Republicans in Virginia and New Jersey ran with stunning strength, as Biden’s approval rating tanks and national pessimism rises.
  • The red wave even swept Long Island.

Voters also sent Democrats a warning for 2022: There could be a massive backlash to perceptions that progressives are pulling the party too far left, Axios managing editor Margaret Talev writes.

  • White women in Virginia swung to the GOP by 15 points compared to 2020’s results, NBC’s exit poll found.

What happened: Republicans pulled off a decisive upset in what had been blue-trending Virginia, with cliffhanger results in New Jersey and a rejection of defund-the-police in Minneapolis.

  • Republican Glenn Youngkin squashed Terry McAuliffe’s comeback bid for Virginia governor (51% to 49%), leaning into suburban parents’ concerns about culture wars in public schools + frustration with President Biden. Networks called the race at 12:30 a.m. Republicans also won control of the House of Delegates (Richmond Times-Dispatch).
  • In New Jersey, Gov. Phil Murphy (D), who had been expected to win easily, remains in a tight fight with Republican Jack Ciattarelli (65 votes separate the two, per CNN). In post-midnight appearances before supporters, both said they expect to win.
  • In Minneapolis, voters rejected a ballot measure to replace the police department with a Department of Public Safety. The result — in the city where George Floyd was murdered — is a significant blow to the police reform movement’s momentum in Minneapolis and beyond.

Between the lines: Gallup puts Biden’s approval at 42% — the lowest for any president in October of their first year going back to Dwight Eisenhower in 1953 — except Donald Trump, who was at 37%.

  • Many in Biden’s own party don’t want him to run again: In an NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll out Monday, “just 36% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents thought they would have a better chance in 2024 with Biden on the ballot as opposed to someone else.”

What’s next: Biden, Speaker Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer can be expected to use the wake-up call to try to force a reset, pushing for swift action on Biden’s agenda.

  • “It’s time for Democrats to stop f—— around,” a senior aide to a House moderate told Axios’ Sarah Mucha. “Show the voters we actually can govern.”

But the results could make it harder to get Dems from tough districts on board.

  • David Axelrod said on CNN: “When things go badly, people begin to think of themselves.

Share this story.

2. 📊 The exit-poll question that said it all

Screenshot: MSNBC

You could tell where the night was headed at 5:25 p.m. ET, when Josh Kraushaar tweeted how Virginia voters had answered the exit-poll question: How much say should parents have in their child’s curriculum?

  • A lot: 53% [Later updated to 51%]
  • Some: 31% [Later updated to 33%]
  • Not much: 10%
  • Not at all: 3%

Go deeper: Explore the exit poll.

3. 🤔 Dems push tax cut for rich

Jason Furman was chairman of President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers. Via Twitter

Democrats neared agreement on a plan to do away with the $10,000 limit on state and local tax deductions that particularly hits New York, California and other high-tax states, enacted as part of the Trump-era 2017 tax plan. (AP)

🥊 Here’s what Sen. Bernie Sanders told Jonathan Swan on “Axios on HBO” in May, when asked what would happen if Dems reinstate SALT, a tax break for rich people in blue states:

  • “It sends a terrible, terrible message. … And you can’t be on the side of the wealthy and the powerful if you’re gonna really fight for working families.”

Watch the clip.

4. Mayoral milestones for Asian Americans
Boston Mayor-elect Michelle Wu celebrates last night with her husband, Conor Pewarski, and their sons, Blaise and Cass. Photo: Josh Reynolds/AP

Progressive Michelle Wu, 36, was elected Boston mayor, becoming the first woman and first person of color to hold the office in 199 years.

  • “Her victory is a triumph of a new Boston over the establishment,” the Boston Globe reports.
  • “Courting a city attached to its traditions, she presented an unapologetic, novel agenda: … free public transportation, an entirely new approach to downtown development, rent control, and a municipal-level Green New Deal.”

In Cincinnati, Aftab Pureval, 39, was elected that city’s first Asian American mayor.

  • “When you see A-f-t-a-b on a yard sign, it doesn’t occur to people that’s a candidate, not an insurance company,” Pureval told AP. “When you’re Asian, when you have an ethnic name, it’s just harder. You’ve got to be creative, … you’ve got to knock on more doors.”

Dearborn, Mich., elected state lawmaker Abdullah Hammoud as the first Arab American mayor.

  • In New York City, Democrat Eric Adams won the mayor’s race — putting a former NYPD officer in charge of America’s biggest city.
5. Dow passes 36,000
Data: FactSet. Chart: Axios Visuals

The Dow closed above 36,000 yesterday for the first time ever.

The Wall Street Journal calls it “a reminder of a Wall Street maxim about market predictions: Forecast a number or a date, never both.”

  • Glassman is 74; Hassett is 59. May you outlive your wildest predictions!
6. Behind Biden’s China scolding

Illustration: Allie Carl/Axios

President Biden’s declaration that Chinese leader Xi Jinping has “walked away” from an opportunity to help save the planet showed the intensity of the simmering rivalry lingering in the back of the COP26 climate summit, Axios’ Dave Lawler writes from Glasgow.

  • “The single most important thing that’s got the attention of the world is climate … It just is a gigantic issue, and they’ve walked away,” Biden said in his final COP26 press conference yesterday. “How do you do that and claim to be able to have any leadership mantle?”

Why it matters: The U.S. and China combine for nearly 40% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions, meaning that any major climate breakthroughs require both superpowers on board.

  • Xi opted against both traveling to Scotland and offering new pledges to cut emissions, undermining the summit before it even began.
  • Biden, meanwhile, offered big initiatives during the world leader portion of COP26 — but the threat to his climate agenda on Capitol Hill reverberated in the halls of the conference.

Keep reading.

7. ⚾ Last night’s other big winner
Jorge Soler, Atlanta Braves designated hitter, is named MVP. Photo: Bob Levey/Getty Images

The Braves routed the Houston Astros 7-0 in Game 6, taking home Atlanta’s first World Series crown since 1995:

Twenty-six years and 16 postseason appearances since that memorable Oct. 28 day in 1995, the Braves brought Atlanta its second World Series championship Tuesday in Houston. This team’s one-of-a-kind story will be shared and referenced across generations with the simplest yet most invaluable lesson: never give up.

— Atlanta Journal-Constitution

8. 📷 1 smile to go: Dream realized
Via Instagram

A mural in Honolulu pays tribute to the first U.S. Olympic surfing champion, Carissa Moore, who won gold in Tokyo this summer, Axios executive editor Sara Kehaulani Goo tells me.

  • The mural depicts her wrapped in the Hawaii state flag, in the foreground of legendary Hawaii surfer Duke Kahanamoku (1890-1968).
  • Duke dominated the Olympics for swimming in his day, and started pushing for recognition of surfing as an Olympic sport back in 1912.

Go deeper.

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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES


16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Republican Glenn Youngkin upset Democrat Terry McAuliffe in Virginia’s gubernatorial race, breaking his party’s losing …
America’s Newspaper
November 3, 2021

   

The Washington Times
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Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin speaks at an election night party in Chantilly, Va., early Wednesday, Nov. 3, 2021, after he defeated Democrat Terry McAuliffe. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

Youngkin defeats McAuliffe in Virginia

Republican Glenn Youngkin upset Democrat Terry McAuliffe in Virginia’s gubernatorial race, breaking his party’s losing streak in the state and … Read More

By Kerry PicketMica Soellner and Seth McLaughlin

Top Headlines

 

After a year of election integrity doubts, voters in Va. and N.J. say they trust the system

By Mica SoellnerTom Howell Jr. and Kerry Picket – Read More

Biden bill on social welfare, climate change estimated to kill 103K jobs, raise taxes on 80% of U.S.

By Haris Alic – Read More

Climate hypocrisy? Biden takes heat for carbon footprint at U.N. summit

By Valerie Richardson – Read More

Navy must speed up shipbuilding, modernization to keep pace with China, Russia at sea, analysts say

By Mike Glenn – Read More

Rash of violence has some schools bringing back campus cops

By Emily Zantow – Read More

U.S. Navy Memorial unveils statue honoring war dogs, first in nation’s capital

By Sean Salai – Read More

Opinion

 

Youngkin vs. McAuliffe: Two opposing strategies

By Newt Gingrich – Read More

Why working-class Americans vote Republican

By Jeff Bergner – Read More

The left’s radical talking points on schools is having the opposite effect

By Jonathan Butcher – Read More

Politics

 

Winsome Sears makes history as first African American woman in Virginia to win statewide race

By Kerry Picket – Read More

Far-left Democrats blame Manchin, Sinema for McAuliffe’s loss in Virginia

By Haris Alic – Read More

Trump: ‘My BASE’ drove Glenn Youngkin’s victory

By Seth McLaughlin – Read More

Security

 

Navy investigation reveals sub hit uncharted underwater mountain

By Joseph Clark – Read More

Kremlin: Western reports of troop buildup near Ukraine ‘fake news’

By David R. Sands – Read More

Federal cyber agency: ‘No specific, credible threat to election infrastructure’ on Tuesday

By Ryan Lovelace – Read More

Sports

 

Hammerin’ Braves win 1st World Series crown since 1995, rout Astros

By Ben Walker – Read More

Blewitt keeps Washington kicker job ‘for now’

By Matthew Paras – Read More

Maryland ‘back to neutral’ ahead of challenge against Penn State

By George Gerbo – Read More

 

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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Chicago Tribune
VIEW IN BROWSER NOVEMBER 3, 2021 CHICAGOTRIBUNE.COM

DAYWATCH

Good morning, Chicago.
In a major vaccine milestone, U.S. health officials on Tuesday gave final approval to Pfizer’s kid-sized COVID-19 shot for children 5-11. Parents, here’s what to know.
In less encouraging news, just weeks after suggesting the state’s mask mandate might be lifted before the holidays, Gov. J.B. Pritzker offered a sober assessment Tuesday about the pandemic in Illinois. While the numbers of new COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are well below their peaks during the recent surge, they remain far above where they were early this summer, and the trends have stopped dropping.
And California and Mississippi are back on Chicago’s travel advisory, with public health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady warning: “This is no time for complacency.”
— Paul Day, audience editor
Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day.

1

‘Chaos tourist’ or selfless teen? Kyle Rittenhouse’s murder trial begins with dueling portraits of the shooter

Kyle Rittenhouse’s murder trial began Tuesday with dueling portraits of a shooter whose case has come to embody the country’s deep political divide.

The prosecution painted Rittenhouse as a “chaos tourist” who arrived in Kenosha amid protests over the police shooting of Jacob Blake to impose his own sense of justice. The defense, in response, portrayed him as a selfless, if naive, teenager who was forced to stop people from taking his gun and using it against him.

2

FBI ordered Heather Mack to return to Chicago, not Los Angeles, following release from Bali prison, lawyer says

The FBI directed Heather Mack to return to Chicago and not Los Angeles as she’d originally planned following her release from prison in Bali for helping to murder her mother at a resort in 2014, her lawyer told the Tribune late Tuesday.

Mack was scheduled to land at O’Hare International Airport at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday on a flight from South Korea, where she likely will be detained by authorities, California-based attorney Brian Claypool said. Whether she’ll face criminal charges or simply questioning about her mother’s death remained to be seen, Claypool said.

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3

McDonald’s CEO sparks controversy with texts to Mayor Lightfoot saying parents of Adam Toledo, Jaslyn Adams ‘failed those kids’

McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski on Tuesday addressed comments he made in a text exchange with Mayor Lori Lightfoot appearing to blame the parents of two Chicago children fatally shot earlier this year, saying his comments lacked “compassion and empathy.”

Kempczinski sent the messages, which angered community groups after they were recently made public, after meeting with Lightfoot at McDonald’s Chicago headquarters in April. In the texts, he said the parents of children shot in two separate shootings “failed those kids.”

4

After years of delays, O’Hare’s ‘people mover’ to reopen Wednesday on a limited schedule

After years of construction delays, the “people mover” at O’Hare International Airport will reopen Wednesday on a limited schedule, just in time for holiday travelers.

The automated train, officially called the Airport Transit System, will operate between 10:30 a.m. and 8:30 p.m. to start. The Chicago Department of Aviation expects to return the train to full, 24/7 operation in early 2022, the agency said Tuesday.

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5

Steppenwolf Theatre unveils its new $54 million campus, and a plan to run the theater in an entirely new way

On Tuesday morning, Chicago’s illustrious Steppenwolf Theatre Company dedicated its new Liz and Eric Lefkofsky Arts and Education Center, a $54 million bet on the Lincoln Park theater’s post-pandemic future. With many of the theater’s famed ensemble members in town for the occasion, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, Mayor Lori Lightfoot and first lady Amy Eshleman, a member of the Steppenwolf board of trustees, spoke eloquently and warmly of Steppenwolf’s storied place in Chicago’s creative community.


21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES

‘It’s gonna be a war’ if feds arrest Heather Mack, attorney warns

Chicago Sun-Times Morning Edition
Good morning, Chicago —
Here’s the latest news from around the area this morning.
With his client bound for Chicago for the first time since the 2014 murder of her mother in Bali, an attorney for Heather Mack warned “it’s gonna be a war” if federal authorities arrest the infamous Chicagoan who served a little more than seven years for the brutal crime. Jon Seidel has more ahead of Mack’s expected arrival at O’Hare Airport this morning.
Meanwhile more than seven months after Block Club Chicago began a series of reports on Loretto Hospital’s mishandling of COVID-19 vaccines, the hospital’s vaccine program is under federal investigation, a source confirmed to Seidel.
And fallout from the Chicago Park District misconduct scandal continued yesterday when the department fired three top executives after the public release of a blistering report that exposed a frat-house culture tolerated for decades.
Get even more news below, and thanks for reading.
Satchel Price, assistant audience engagement editor
‘It’s gonna be a war’ if feds arrest Heather Mack when she returns to Chicago, attorney warns

Feds looking into Loretto Hospital’s vaccination program

Park District fires three more top officials as lifeguard scandal fallout continues

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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT

The Hill's Morning Report
Presented by ExxonMobil
Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin arrives to speak at an election night party

© Associated Press/Andrew Harnik

 

 

Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Wednesday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!

Total U.S. coronavirus deaths each morning this week: Monday, 745,836; Tuesday, 747,033; Wednesday, 748,621.
National Republicans could not have dreamed of a more commanding night as conservative Glenn Youngkin defeated Democrat Terry McAuliffe in the Virginia gubernatorial contest that notched record-shattering turnout. The GOP racked up a clean sweep of Virginia’s statewide contests on Tuesday and in the process dealt a significant blow to President Biden and his party ahead of next year’s midterms.

 

Adding to the bad news for the party in power, what was supposed to be a relatively easy reelection bid for New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy (D) (pictured below) turned into anything but. The incumbent’s race with GOP challenger Jack Ciattarelli is too close to call this morning. Before press time, Ciattarelli was leading by nearly 1,200 votes (49.65 percent to 49.6 percent).

 

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy speaks to supporters during an election night party

© Associated Press/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez

 

 

Youngkin, the former executive of the Carlyle Group, defeated the former governor who once chaired the Democratic National Committee by 50.7 percent to 48.6 percent with more than 95 percent of the ballots tallied. The Associated Press called the race today at 12:37 a.m.

 

By late Tuesday, a political narrative began to harden that in race after race, and in key ballot questions, voters sent a pointed message: progressives do not represent their views. That message was at the heart of GOP campaigns this year, and it will continue to shape how the party out of power in the House and Senate strategizes to try to sweep Democrats aside a year from now.

 

Biden, who campaigned as a centrist and has governed to the left, faces tough choices in trying to chart a winning path between increasingly frustrated factions of the Democratic Party. His claims to be a peacemaker, savvy negotiator, alliance builder and problem solver have not been persuasive, according to polls showing majority disapproval of his performance as president.

 

Hours before polls closed and before departing a climate summit in Scotland, Biden predicted Democratic victories in Virginia and New Jersey and dismissed suggestions that Election Night results were reflections on his presidency. “I’ve not seen any evidence that, whether or not I am doing well or poorly, whether or not I’ve got my agenda passed or not, is going to have any real impact on winning and losing,” he told reporters.

 

In Virginia, the Republican nominee, who bludgeoned McAuliffe’s campaign with attacks focused on education and the economy, limited the Democrat’s vote totals in the suburbs and in some Democratic strongholds. Youngkin ran up support in rural parts of what is today a purple state en route to his clear victory in the first major post-2020 test of Biden’s political might.

 

“Let’s climb that hill together,” Youngkin said In his victory speech shortly after 1 a.m. “Let’s reinvigorate our future, let’s reinvigorate this amazing commonwealth of Virginia. Together, together, together, together we can build a new day, a new day for Virginians where yes, we soar and we never settle,” he told supporters (The Hill).

 

Hours earlier, McAuliffe (seen below) declined to concede the race, telling supporters in McLean, Va., “we’re going to continue to count votes because every single Virginian matters,” (The Hill).

 

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe prepares to speak at an election night party

© Associated Press/Steve Helber

 

 

The Hill: Former President Trump, who endorsed Youngkin, took a victory lap behind the candidates’ voter turnout.

 

The Washington Post: Trump and Youngkin spoke by phone throughout the campaign, even as Youngkin publicly appeared to keep his distance from the former president.

 

In addition to Youngkin’s win, Republicans also scored a number of key results in the state. Republican Winsome Sears defeated Democrat Haya Ayala to become the first Black lieutenant governor in state history. Jason Miyares defeated two-term incumbent state Attorney General Mark Herring (D) to take over as Virginia’s top cop. Putting a cherry on the sundae, the party also flipped at least five seats in the Virginia House of Delegates and are on the verge of winning a sixth, which would hand the GOP a majority in the chamber (The Hill).

 

The Virginia results instantly reverberated across the political sphere, especially on Capitol Hill as Democratic lawmakers have yet to reach a deal on the Build Back Better agenda. After months of finger-pointing between progressives and centrists, Democrats are left to wonder what impact Youngkin’s victory will have as talks close in on the finish line.

 

“I don’t know. Do some of my skittish colleagues freak out and go south? Possible. Do some of my colleagues suddenly wake up and say, ‘S—, we better pass these two bills no matter what!’ Possible,” one House Democrat told the Morning Report. “I do think the overwhelming majority of my Dem colleagues get it: there’s no plausible alternative for us than passing both bills.”

 

The big night also buoyed the already-high spirits of Republicans a year out from the 2022 midterm elections, giving them proof that winning back the suburbs is possible, especially without Trump at the top of the ticket. At the moment, the GOP is only five seats shy of retaking the majority in the House, and needs just one seat to break the 50-50 deadlock in the upper chamber despite a more challenging map.

 

Youngkin’s win also gave hope to Republicans who are more lukewarm about Trump’s influence on the party. The business executive won the state GOP convention despite not being the most Trump-y candidate and keeping the former president at arms length throughout the general election campaign, even though he endorsed him.

 

“Youngkin’s victory in Virginia should serve as a wake up call to Democrats everywhere that an epic wave is on the way,” one GOP strategist told the Morning Report. “We’re looking at the sort of wave that could sweep a wide variety of Republicans into office.”

 

A majority of Virginia voters said before Election Day that they had an unfavorable view of Trump, but Youngkin fared better, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of voters. About half said they had a favorable opinion of the Republican candidate. The economy ranked as the top issue facing Virginia, with the coronavirus pandemic and education trailing. Virginia voters split in their opinion of Biden’s performance in the White House.

 

Niall Stanage: The Memo: Five takeaways from a grim night for Democrats.

 

The Associated Press: Bad omens for Democrats.

 

The Washington Post: Reeling Democrats see threats to House and Senate control as Republicans crack their 2020 coalition.

 

More politics: Michelle Wu took home the Boston mayoral race, defeating Annissa Essaibi-George to become the first non-white male to helm the city in history (The Boston Globe).  … Democrat and Brooklyn borough president Eric Adams is mayor-elect in New York City (The New York Times). … Minneapolis voters on Tuesday rejected a proposal to replace police with a new Department of Public Safety (The Associated Press). … New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) last week filed paperwork to potentially run for governor, according to Monday reports (CBSlocal).

A MESSAGE FROM EXXONMOBIL
Carbon capture and storage. One way we’re helping reduce emissions.

Industry and power generation account for nearly two-thirds of global CO2 emissions. At ExxonMobil, we’re collaborating on some of the world’s largest carbon capture and storage projects to help reduce these emissions at scale.

LEADING THE DAY
CONGRESS: Democratic lawmakers inched closer to a deal on Biden’s Build Back Better agenda on Tuesday as negotiators forged compromises, or were close to doing so, on two key provisions.

 

Biden and Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) announced that Democrats reached an accord designed to lower prescription drug prices. Although the agreement does not go as far as initial proposals, it is seen as progress after years of debate. The pharmaceutical industry immediately assailed the specifics on Tuesday, saying the proposal “threatens innovation and makes a broken health care system even worse.”

 

As The Hill’s Peter Sullivan details, the deal would allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices in limited instances, prevent drug companies from raising prices faster than inflation and cap out-of-pocket costs for seniors on Medicare at $2,000 per year. The majority party was forced to roll back its initial blueprint over concerns from centrists, including Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), Rep. Scott Peters (D-Calif.) and Rep. Kurt Schrader (D-Ore.), that it would have harmed innovation from drug companies to develop new treatments.

 

“It’s not everything we all wanted. Many of us would have wanted to go much further, but it’s a big step in helping the American people deal with the price of drugs,” Schumer told reporters on Tuesday (The Hill).

 

The Hill: Biden says Manchin will support a final version of the Democratic spending bill.

 

Politico: Dems aim to squeeze immigration into the pending social spending bill — without a legislative path to citizenship.

 

The Hill: Hispanic Democrats at odds on immigration as deal nears.

 

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., talk about the need for the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act

© Associated Press/J. Scott Applewhite

 

 

Democrats also say they’re moving closer a deal on a five-year repeal of the cap on the state and local tax (SALT) deduction. A Democratic aide and a Democratic lawmaker familiar with the discussions told The Hill’s Naomi Jagoda that members are looking at repealing the $10,000 cap through 2025 and offsetting the cost of doing so by imposing the cap in subsequent years.

 

Repeal of the deduction cap enacted in 2017 as part of the GOP tax reform law has been a top priority for lawmakers in New York and New Jersey, two high-tax states.

 

“Today’s news is encouraging for a SALT cap repeal to be included in the final reconciliation package,” Reps. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.), Tom Suozzi (D-N.Y.) and Mikie Sherrill (D-N.J.) said in a statement. “We will continue to work with House and Senate leadership to ensure the cap on the SALT deduction is repealed. No SALT, no deal. No SALT, no dice.”

 

House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal (D-Mass.) told reporters earlier in the day that SALT discussions were ongoing, with details resting largely with Schumer. However, news of the five-year repeal went off with a thud as some lawmakers consider the current plan a tax break for millionaires.

 

“My guess is the majority of Americans with a net worth of $50 (million) to $300 million would get a tax cut under the Build Back Better plan with a full repeal of SALT,” said Jason Furman, who served as chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under former President Obama.

 

“The bill would do more for the super-rich than it does for climate change, child care or preschool. That’s obscene,” he continued, adding that some billionaires would even get a net tax cut from the combo of the Build Back Better plan and the SALT repeal.

 

The Hill: Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.): Proposed five-year SALT cap repeal “beyond unacceptable.”

 

CNN: Tax the rich? Maybe not. Democrats’ spending plan could be a tax cut for the rich, budget watchdog finds.

 

MarketWatch“Sunset shenanigans”? Restoring an uncapped state and local tax deduction allows filers to reduce their federal tax burden by the amount they pay in state and local taxes. Many say it benefits only the highest-income earners, which besides being bad policy is also expensive, costing about $90 billion a year.

 

The Hill: Moderate Democrats press for an official budget office analysis of proposed legislation before a vote on the Biden package.

 

The Hill: Foreign automakers mount push against electric vehicle tax credit.

 

*****

 

ADMINISTRATION: Biden, who claimed historic progress in the international effort to combat climate change, on Tuesday questioned how China can lead as one of the world’s economic powers without fully immersing itself in the climate talks that world leaders wrapped up over two days. The United Nations climate conference known as COP26 continues in Glasgow through Nov. 12 (MarketWatch and The Hill).

 

President Xi Jinping of China, representing the largest national emitter of greenhouse gases, opted to address the summit with a written statement. Limiting other interactions and discussions was a “big mistake,” Biden said during a press conference before returning to the White House. “What value added are they (China) providing? They lost an ability to influence people around the world.”

 

“The same way, I would argue, with regard to Russia,” Biden continued. Russian President Vladimir Putin, whose state-run natural gas operation is seen as a key supplier to help remedy the lingering energy crisis in Europe and Asia, was not present in Scotland.

 

The U.S. “showed up and by showing up we’ve had a profound impact on the way I think the rest of the world was looking at the United States,” Biden said.

 

President Joe Biden speaks during a news conference at the COP26 U.N. Climate Summit

© Associated Press/Evan Vucci

 

 

> Suicide & guns: The White House announced a plan to reduce the risk of guns used in suicide through awareness and training campaigns and new regulations to increase the availability of gun storage products. In this country in 2019, firearms were the most common method used in suicide deaths, accounting for nearly 24,000 fatalities, or a little over half of all suicide deaths, according to federal health statistics.

 

The administration plan calls for federal agencies, including the Defense Department, Homeland Security, the Justice Department, Health and Human Services, Veterans Affairs and the Department of Transportation’s emergency medical services office to create public awareness campaigns to encourage safer storage of guns and training for counselors, crisis responders and others. The effort calls for the Justice Department to finalize a regulation first proposed in 2016 that would require stores that sell firearms to also offer secure gun storage and safety devices (The Associated Press).

 

> Trade: Biden’s recent agreement with the European Union to lift steel tariffs is the administration’s first concrete step toward a significant shift in trade policy. The president wants to form a united front with allies to tackle China’s economic influence. At the same time, Biden faces pressures from key constituencies not to unwind all of Trump’s protectionist policies (The Hill).

IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CORONAVIRUS: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention accepted the views of independent vaccine experts on Tuesday as they endorsed Pfizer-BioNTech’s COVID-19 vaccine doses for children ages 5 to 11, saying pediatric doses are safe and will protect youngsters from harmful illness, should they become infected. As a result, 28 million children are eligible for inoculations (The Hill).

 

The decision by the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices was followed by the expected recommendation late Tuesday from CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, who hours earlier indicated her enthusiasm for vaccinating young children against the coronavirus, noting the impact of the pandemic on children’s lives and the serious health risks of the virus, even in children (NBC News and CNN).

 

We have been asking when we will be able to expand this protection to our younger children,” she said in opening comments to the agency’s vaccine experts.

 

The Food and Drug Administration on Friday gave its blessing to inoculate children ages 5 to 11 based on clinical trial data. The CDC’s recommendation will allow clinicians, pharmacies and other health care providers to start giving the shots as early as today. The vaccination effort is expected to be fully running by next week, said Jeff Zients, the White House coronavirus coordinator, at a news conference on Monday.

 

The Biden administration said it has purchased enough vaccine doses to give shots to all of the country’s 28 million children ages 5 to 11 years old and has been working with state and local leaders to be ready to distribute the vaccines.

 

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky testifies

© Associated Press/Jim Lo Scalzo

 

 

> POTUS safety: White House officials say they’re taking all possible precautions to keep Biden free from COVID-19, following news that the president’s press secretary, Jen Psaki, tested positive for an apparent breakthrough infection. Biden, 78, who is fully vaccinated and recently received a Pfizer booster shot, is tested for the coronavirus at least every two weeks as a safety precaution and was tested on Saturday for his travels to Italy and Scotland, now concluded. He arrived back at the White House early this morning. His spokespeople decline to say how many Biden aides have tested positive for COVID-19 (The Hill). “We know there will be breakthrough cases, but as this incident shows, cases in vaccinated individuals are typically mild,” Psaki told reporters in July (The Washington Post).

 

> Mandates: Some first responders are balking at requirements by local governments that they get vaccinated against COVID-19. In New York City, firefighters used a “sickout” last week to defy a vaccination deadline. They have been accused of neglecting their oath and endangering the safety of city residents by refusing to be inoculated during a global pandemic as a requirement of their jobs. The Hill’s Justine Coleman reports that “sickout” protests could spread to other cities, a prospect that worries officials.

OPINION
Virginia proves it: Democrats are slipping with the voters who gave them victory in 2020, by Karen Tumulty, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3nQvlWN

 

Can Eric Adams halt New York City’s decline? By Jason Riley, columnist, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/2ZNzUZw

 

Mark Zuckerberg doesn’t have to control the future, by The Washington Post editorial board. https://wapo.st/3bCIjBK

A MESSAGE FROM EXXONMOBIL
WHERE AND WHEN
The House convenes at noon.

 

The Senate meets at 10 a.m. to resume consideration of the nomination of Robert Luis Santos to be director of the census.

 

The president returned to the White House from Scotland at 1:06 a.m. He will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 1 p.m. with Vice President Harris.

 

The Federal Reserve concludes a two-day meeting with a written statement at 2 p.m. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell will answer reporters’ questions at 2:30 p.m.

 

The White House coronavirus response team will brief journalists at 1:45 p.m.

 

👉 INVITATION: The Hill’s Virtually Live on THURSDAY at noon hosts “Diabetes Technology: Disparities, Access & Equity,” featuring patient advocate Patti LaBelle; Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.), chairwoman of the House Diabetes Caucus; Rep. Mike Kelly (R-Pa.), the Diabetes Caucus vice chairman; and top medical experts. Information is HERE.

 

📺 Hill.TV’s “Rising” program features news and interviews at http://thehill.com/hilltv or on YouTube at 10:30 a.m. ET at Rising on YouTube.

ELSEWHERE
 TECH: Facebook’s rebrand to Meta hit a snag with discovery that an Arizona-based tech company in August began to trademark its name, Meta PC. The founders of the smaller Meta are willing to resolve the issue for a price: $20 million (TMZ). … Facebook in a blog post on Tuesday announced plans to shut down its decade-old facial recognition system this month, deleting the face scan data of more than 1 billion users and effectively eliminating a feature that has fueled privacy concerns, government investigations, a class-action lawsuit and regulatory woes (The New York Times). … Yahoo Inc. on Tuesday said it pulled out of China, citing an increasingly “challenging business and legal environment” there (The Associated Press). … Elon Musk said late Monday on Twitter that Tesla has not signed a contract with Hertz more than a week after the car rental firm announced a massive deal with the electric carmaker. The deal garnered extensive attention and trading. Musk’s latest detail halted a stock rally (The New York Times and Reuters).

 

Tesla CEO Elon Musk departs from the justice center in Wilmington, Del.

© Associated Press/Matt Rourke

 

 

 COURTS: The Supreme Court today weighs a challenge to the New York State concealed-weapons permit law (The Wall Street Journal). … In California, Orange County Superior Court Judge Peter Wilson sided with drug manufacturers and issued a tentative ruling this week that said local governments had not proved that pharmaceutical companies used deceptive marketing to increase unnecessary opioid prescriptions and create a public nuisance. Los Angeles, Orange and Santa Clara counties and the city of Oakland are seeking billions of dollars to cover their costs from the nation’s opioid epidemic (The Associated Press).

 

 COLD CASES IN THE PERMAFROST: A warming planet and melting permafrost have exposed ancient clues about man and even preserved mammoths across the continents. The New York Times has seven fascinating images HERE of items that have emerged, preserved from once-frozen graves. When contemporary searches began, “the finds were mainly Iron Age and medieval, from 500 to 1,500 years ago, but as the melting widens, ever older periods of history are being exposed. `We have now melted back to the Stone Age in some places, with pieces as old as six millenniums,’” Lars Holger Pilo, director of Norway’s state-funded Glacier Archaeology Program, told the Times. “We are speeding back in time.”

THE CLOSER
And finally … ⚾ After a 26-year drought, the Atlanta Braves are world champions, defeating the Houston Astros, 7-0, in six games.

 

Atlanta was led by starting pitcher Max Fried, who fired six shutout innings of four hit baseball, and Jorge Soler, who took home World Series MVP honors after hammering three home runs in the series, including a third inning three-run blast over the train tracks in left field to give the Braves the lead for good.

 

The Braves victory also brings sad news as the baseball season is over. However, it could be worse: the season could be over, AND the Houston Astros could be the champs. No trash cans to save them this time around.

 

Atlanta Braves relief pitcher Will Smith and catcher Travis d'Arnaud celebrate

© Associated Press/David J. Phillip

 

The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE! 
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT

 


24.) ROLL CALL

Image

Morning Headlines

ImageThe 2022 midterms already feature more than two dozen wealthy Senate candidates spending their own money on their campaigns, with several spending in top battleground races, according to recent fundraising reports.  Read more…

ImageANALYSIS — Even though the Virginia governor’s race is just one race in one state, Republican Glenn Youngkin’s victory will reverberate around the country and set the early stage for the 2022 midterms. CQ Roll Call elections analyst Nathan L. Gonzales has a few initial takeaways. Read more…

Centrist Democrats balk at quick House vote on budget bill

 

ImageHouse Democratic leaders may not have the votes to pass their budget reconciliation package this week, after five moderates said they won’t support it until they have time to review the final text and corresponding cost estimates that aren’t yet available.  Read more…

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Shadow speaker: Progressive leader Jayapal rises during budget brawl

 

ImageANALYSIS — As her party’s warring factions have struggled to pass a bipartisan infrastructure bill and strike a deal on a massive social spending measure, Congressional Progressive Caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal has made move after move that outflanked other leaders, including Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Read more…

The top 10 Senate self-funders so far

 

ImageHere are the 10 Senate candidates who had invested the largest amounts of their own money in their races through Sept. 30, and whose net worths range from $4 million and $99 million. Read more…

NFL wants to move past Washington’s scandal, House Oversight says not so fast

 

ImageAs the NFL seeks to close the book on the Washington Football Team’s many scandals, Congress has made clear the league won’t be able to change the subject just yet. League officials have until Thursday to turn over documents related to a longstanding toxic culture within the Washington organization. Read more…

Brown, Carey win open Ohio seats, keeping party control unchanged

 

ImageOhio’s two open House seats will be filled by the same parties that controlled them at the start of the year after special election victories Tuesday by Democrat Shontel Brown in the Cleveland-area 11th District and Republican Mike Carey in the 15th District south of Columbus. Read more…

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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK

POLITICO Playbook: Let the Democratic freakout begin

Presented by

DRIVING THE DAY

THE NAIL BITER  New Jersey’s gubernatorial race is still too close to call as you wake up this morning. With 88% of the expected vote in, incumbent PHIL MURPHY is trailing Republican JACK CIATTARELLI by just over 1,000 votes.

PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN returned from Europe overnight to a Washington where politics has been completely upended since he left six days ago.

Before he departed, Biden told House Democrats, “I don’t think it’s hyperbole to say that the House and Senate majorities and my presidency will be determined by what happens in the next week.” He meant inaction on his two legislative priorities, leaving Europe with no congressional backing for his climate proposals, and potential defeats in one or more crucial elections Tuesday that would make everything worse. Biden may have been prescient.

Biden may have mattered more than DONALD TRUMP in GLENN YOUNGKIN’s triumph over TERRY MCAULIFFE. According to exit polls, Biden was about as unpopular as Trump in Virginia. But Biden embraced the race as a referendum on his presidency and campaigned in the state while Trump, to his great annoyance, was persuaded to stay away.

There’s an incentive by the progressive left and the Trumpist right to exaggerate the importance of Trumpism to Youngkin’s win. The left would like to think that Fox News-inflamed culture war issues like critical race theory were a silver bullet. Trump would like us to believe that he is somehow responsible for shifting the state from a 10-point loss last year to a 2-point win Tuesday night.

Youngkin had to overcome Trumpism more than he had to rely on it. He ran a campaign that was a throwback to pre-Trump Republicanism: racial appeals to working-class white voters, combined with technocratic conservatism focused on education, low taxes and government efficiency via TV ads and rallies (having a human answer the phone at the DMV was a big applause line).

The two-track strategy worked. Trump lost the Virginia suburbs 45-53, while Youngkin won the suburbs 53-47.

“We’re finding out that Democrats were renting those voters, not buying them,” JESSE HUNT, spokesman for the RGA, told Playbook as we watched the returns come in at the Youngkin victory party in Chantilly on Tuesday night.

In fact, in rural Virginia and among non-college-educated whites Youngkin racked up even bigger margins than Trump, according to exit polls. Trump won rural Virginia 52-46 last year. Youngkin won it 64-36. Trump won non-college whites 62-38. Youngkin won those voters by a whopping 76-24. Youngkin’s pivot to the center was successful, but his quiet fueling of the Trump base seemed to pay even bigger dividends.

The off-year Virginia gubernatorial election has a nearly perfect record in recent decades of serving as the first voter backlash against the party in power, so in a sense the results were not that surprising. But Youngkin’s victory — after Biden’s 10-point win in the state a year ago, when the prevailing wisdom became that Virginia had moved firmly from swing state to blue state — shows that the backlash was indeed fierce.

Virginia Republicans saw Youngkin’s surge begin in August when America’s messy exit from Afghanistan started to drag down Biden’s approval rating. McAuliffe began the summer distributing literature showing Youngkin and the president. By the fall, Biden had disappeared from the candidate’s mailers in swing areas. On Tuesday, Biden’s approval rating was the lowest of his presidency: 42.8%.

History strongly suggests that the midterms will deliver the next big blow to the incumbent president. But the more immediate danger for Biden is his precarious legislative agenda. Democrats insist that passing the infrastructure bill would have helped McAuliffe. The lack of progress on the bipartisan infrastructure bill (BIF) has been “incredibly damaging,” one Virginia Democrat told POLITICO.

Virginia Republicans were skeptical that Congress could have saved McAuliffe. They insist his rise was propelled by local concerns over education, which became the top issue by the end of the race and which conveniently meant different things to different voters. For some, it was about the state’s Covid-19 restrictions in public schools. For others, it was about the mostly ginned-up CRT issue that dominated Twitter and Fox. It was taking off before McAuliffe’s famous gaffe in the last debate — “I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach” — that served as rocket fuel for Youngkin.

How will Hill Democrats respond to the shellacking?

Tuesday’s results weren’t even official before they added something new for Democratic progressives and moderates to feud about.

A congressman from New Jersey speaking for the mods about the results there: “Fucking disaster down ballot and way too close at the top. Not enough excitement at top of NJ ticket — Biden, Covid, etc. No accomplishments. Should have passed infrastructure a month ago.”

A top aide to House progressives on the McAuliffe defeat: “It’s absurd to blame progressives for Virginia. A) This was a culture war election, not about federal issues. B) Terry McAuliffe is a centrist. C) If you want to fault D.C., fault the tiny group of conservative Dems who intentionally blocked childcare, prescription drug reform, universal pre-k, and paid leave all fall.”

Read below for more on the fallout of the Virginia results on Capitol Hill …

Good Wednesday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael BadeEugene DanielsRyan LizzaTara Palmeri.

BIDEN’S WEDNESDAY: The president arrived back at the White House at 1:35 a.m.

— 1 p.m.: Biden and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief.

The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 1:45 p.m.

The HOUSE will meet at noon.

The SENATE will meet at 10 a.m. to take up ROBERT LUIS SANTOS’ nomination to be director of the census. At 11 a.m., the Senate will vote on the nominations of BENJAMIN HARRIS to be assistant Treasury secretary for economic policy and ISOBEL COLEMAN to be deputy USAID administrator for policy and programming. At 2:15 p.m., the chamber will have a cloture vote on the motion to proceed to the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act. At 5:15 p.m., the Senate will vote on JEFFREY PRIETO to be assistant EPA administrator and RAJESH NAYAK to be assistant Labor secretary for policy. The Finance Committee will vote on CHRIS MAGNUS’ nomination to be Customs and Border Protection commissioner at 9:30 a.m. FAA Administrator STEVE DICKSON will testify before the Commerce Committee at 10 a.m.

PLAYBOOK READS

MORE ON THE VA. GOV RACE

REPUBLICANS SEE YOUNGKIN’S WIN AS A PATH TO SWEEPING CONGRESS. The conservative House Republican Study Committee quickly circulated a memo about lessons the GOP should take from the upset.

Here’s a sampling of what the GOP will say today: “First, the concerns of parents need to be a tier 1 policy issue for Republicans: Youngkin’s success reveals that Republicans can and must become the party of parents. … Second, we need to end the mandates … Youngkin opposes vaccine mandates and mask mandates in public schools …

“Third, we must continue to back the blue. Youngkin pledged to increase funding for police departments and protect ‘Qualified Immunity for our Law Enforcement Heroes,’ which House Democrats tried to end through their police reform bill. Crime, and particularly homicides, have spiked … Fourth, we must continue to focus on the failures of the Biden economy. Youngkin focused on providing relief to runaway inflation caused by the Biden economy and on not locking down the economy again.” Read the full memo here

— A roundup of our election results: Virginia governor … New Jersey governor … Florida’s 20th district … Ohio’s 11th and 15th districts … NYC mayor

THE TAKEAWAYS — “If Tuesday’s elections were the first concrete readings of political conditions since Joe Biden became president, Democrats may be headed straight into a hurricane,” Steve Shepard and David Siders write. The two outline the biggest lessons for Tuesday night’s off-year elections, including suburban and rural voters teaming up to put Youngkin over the top.

CONGRESS

VIRGINIA BLOWBACK — The finger-pointing over McAuliffe’s loss has already started on Capitol Hill. Some Democrats are blaming progressives: McAuliffe himself warned Democratic leaders that they needed to pass the BIF to turn out the base — only Speaker NANCY PELOSI couldn’t get the votes to do it due to opposition on the left. And progressives are pinning blame on moderates, arguing that MANCHINEMA’s obstructionism has thwarted a Democratic legislative victory.

McAuliffe’s defeat poses two big question for the party:

1) What lesson do Hill Democrats take away? After the shellacking in 2020, moderate Democrats blamed progressives’ embrace of socialism and “defund the police” for the fact that they almost lost the House. But progressives argued that they bled seats for the opposite reason: because Democrats didn’t lean more fully into left-tilting policies like Medicare for All.

We’ll be watching today for whether Democrats have the same contradictory takeaways, with moderates arguing that their massive agenda is turning off swing voters while progressives say they need to go bolder to excite Democratic voters.

2) How will this affect reconciliation talks? We see two possibilities: A) That the loss in Virginia will light a fire under Democrats, providing the urgency they needed to get Build Back Better over the finish line. That’s what Chris Cadelago, Laura Barrón-López and Natasha Korecki report Democrats are vowing this morning. Or B) It triggers a whole new round of infighting, as progressives push to go bigger and moderates slimmer.

BEFORE TUESDAY NIGHT, Democrats were within striking distance of finishing the reconciliation bill. They clinched a deal with Sen. KYRSTEN SINEMA (D-Ariz.) to include drug pricing reforms. The proposal, as our Alice Miranda Ollstein reports, would allow “Medicare Part D to negotiate directly with pharmaceutical companies for the first time since its creation, a move the drug industry has fought for nearly two decades.”

But there are still signs of trouble if Pelosi presses forward in trying to pass both BIF and BBB this week: Five moderate House Democrats are demanding a CBO score that has yet to be released. They want three full days to read the finalized bill. And they’re seeking assurances that the legislative text they vote on will be agreed upon by Senate Democrats, so they’re not forced to take tough votes that don’t ultimately lead to signed legislation.

That could be difficult because senators are still haggling over final provisions surrounding immigration and Medicare as well as paid leave. Here are just two policy items still in flux:

 Democrats are also trying to salvage a methane fee in the plan, one that Manchin “has pushed to remove or weaken,” NYT’s Coral Davenport reports.

— Sarah Ferris, Nicholas Wu and Marianne LeVine also write that Dems “are eyeing a compromise that would include new protections and work permits for millions of immigrants, including so-called ‘Dreamers,’ agricultural workers and those fleeing certain volatile nations,” to include in the package, though it will ultimately be up to the Senate parliamentarian.

SLOW-WALKING IT — Sen. JOSH HAWLEY (R-Mo.) blocked a series of confirmations for State Department nominees Tuesday “in a continuation of the unprecedented GOP-led campaign to slow-walk most of Biden’s picks for top foreign policy posts … over his misgivings about the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan,” Andrew Desiderio reports.

THE WHITE HOUSE

NYT’s Katie Rogers recaps Biden’s second major foreign trip, where his major goal was “to reassert America’s ability to lead the world on climate change before it is too late. But he also wanted to reassert Joe Biden.”

JUDICIARY SQUARE

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Speakers from Moms Demand Action, Giffords, Brady, March for Our Lives and the Community Justice Action Fund will gather in front of the Supreme Court at 9 a.m. today as the court prepares to hear oral arguments in NYSRPA v. Bruen, the New York NRA chapter’s challenge to permitting requirements for carrying guns in public. Speakers include former Rep. GABBY GIFFORDS (D-Ariz.), DAVID HOGG and AALAYAH EASTMOND of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, and CAROLYN DIXON of Where Do We Go From Here.

PLAYBOOKERS

IN MEMORIAM — Jean Rounds, wife of South Dakota Sen. Mike Rounds, died Tuesday after a battle with sarcoma cancer.

Shalanda Young, the deputy OMB director, announced the birth of a new baby girl, Charlie.

Glenn Youngkin celebrated his gubernatorial win by signing and tossing basketballs into the audience. Fitting for the governor-elect who is 6’7” and a former RIce University basketball player.

Newsmax released a statement calling out Covid-19 misinformation spread by … its own reporter.

Bernie Sanders retweeted Larry Summers in one of the more unusual alliances we’ve seen in awhile.

Marjorie Taylor Greene was sent a letter from the sergeant-at-arms letting her know she has 20 violations for not wearing a mask. That’s $48,000 in fines, a quarter of her congressional salary.

New York Magazine had seven reporters stake out Eric Adams’ home in Brooklyn to try to solve the where-does-he-actually-live riddle. What they witnessed was wild.

Bernie Sanders used the POLITICO/Morning Consult poll to prove his point on Medicare expansion.

Greg Bluestein, the politics ace at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, was a teensy bit excited that the Braves won the World Series.

SPOTTED: Evan Spiegel and Miranda Kerr touring the monuments with their children and at the annual budget ball for the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget on Tuesday night.

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Amy Grappone is joining the McCain Institute for International Leadership at Arizona State University as senior director of comms and strategic engagement. She most recently was director of comms for Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.).

MEDIA MOVES — Ankush Khardori is now a contributing writer for N.Y. Magazine’s Intelligencer. He previously was a freelance writer and was a white-collar crime and financial fraud prosecutor at the Justice Department. … John Bennett is returning to CQ Roll Call, where he will be editor-at-large. He most recently was senior White House editor at the Washington Examiner. … Rick Santorum is joining Newsmax as a senior political analyst, after he was fired by CNN for remarks he made about the Native American genocide and culture.

TRANSITIONS — Xiyue Wang is joining Rep. Jim Banks’ (R-Ind.) office as national security adviser. He spent more than three years being held hostage in Iran from 2016-2019 and has since pursued graduate studies at Princeton. … Bri Gillis is now political director of the Immigrant Justice Fund at NILC. She previously was on the political teams at NARAL and Giffords, and is a Chuck Schumer, Dianne Feinstein and Mark Udall alum. … Christopher Eddowes is now manager of government affairs at Atlas Crossing. He most recently was a senior legislative assistant for Rep. Lloyd Smucker (R-Pa.).

ENGAGED — Bailee Beshires, press assistant for Sen. Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), and Daniel Yu, senior application support specialist at Tesla Laboratories, got engaged Saturday. Pic

WEDDING — Joshua Chaffee, senior producer for Showtime’s “The Circus,” and Garima Prasai, director of operations and strategy at the nonprofit Resilient Cities Catalyst, got married Oct. 15 in an intimate ceremony with family in New York City. Pic

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Lara Seligman, a Pentagon reporter at POLITICO, and Andy Baskin, an associate at Arent Fox, welcomed Max Adrian Baskin on Monday.

— John Cooper, acting director of media at the Heritage Foundation, and Ali Cooper, a licensed clinical social worker in Northern Virginia, welcomed Caleb Benaiah Cooper on Thursday. Pic

HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) … Reps. Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-Wash.) and Michelle Fischbach (R-Minn.) … Michael Dukakis … Anna Wintour … Katie Packer Beeson of Burning Glass Consulting … Newsmax’s Jenn Pellegrino … Jared Rizzi … Jeff Brownlee of Americans for Prosperity … Phyllis Cuttino of the Climate Action Campaign … Christie Stephenson … Paul Brathwaite of Federal Street Strategies … POLITICO’s Anthony Adragna, Renuka Rayasam and Ryan Hendrixson … Katie Fricchione … Gabby Adler … Amie Kershner … Quentin Fulks … Minh-Thu Pham of New American Voices and Connect-Frontier … Tara Rountree of Rep. Donald McEachin’s (D-Va.) office … Kelli Kedis Ogborn … Amy Rosenbaum … Brian Babcock-Lumish … Christian Haines … Julian Baird Gewirtz … David Case … Jack McLaughlin … Shawn Rusterholz … Stuart Rosenberg … Sky Gallegos … Bob Van Heuvelen … Charlie Hurt … former Reps. Lynn Woolsey (D-Calif.) and Ben Quayle (R-Ariz.) … CAA’s Rachel Adler

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Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.

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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE

 


27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS

 


28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS

 

CDN’s Daily News Blast delivers the day’s news first!
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CDN Daily News Blast

11/03/2021

Excerpts:

Minneapolis Voters Reject Measure To Abolish Police

by Thomas Catenacci –

Minneapolis residents overwhelmingly rejected a measure to replace the city’s police department with a public safety force on Tuesday. Voters rejected the measure by a margin of roughly 56% to 43%, according to the Minnesota state database. The measure proposed to alter the Minneapolis City Charter to completely eliminate the …

Minneapolis Voters Reject Measure To Abolish Police is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Michelle Malkin: America’s Nutty Professor of Anti-White Rage

by Michelle Malkin –

Brittney Cooper — sorry, that’s Dr. Brittney Cooper — certainly takes the cake for the nation’s worst tenured radical (at least for this week, until the next academic nutjob erupts). Armed with a Bachelor of Arts in English and political science from Howard University and a doctorate in American Studies …

Michelle Malkin: America’s Nutty Professor of Anti-White Rage is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Star Parker: House Progressives Detach From Reality

by Star Parker –

Rep. Cori Bush, a Democrat left-wing “squad” member in the House, attacked Democrat Sen. Joe Manchin for his opposition to the multitrillion-dollar Build Back Better Act. Manchin is “anti-Black, anti-child, anti-woman and anti-immigrant,” according to Bush because of his opposition to this mega spending welfare bill. If Bush wants to …

Star Parker: House Progressives Detach From Reality is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Who Wears it Better?

by Michael Ramirez –

See more Ramirez toons HERE.

Who Wears it Better? is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

President Joe Biden’s Schedule for Wednesday, November 3, 2021

by R. Mitchell –

Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing Wednesday. Who can blame him for a light schedule in the middle of the week? After all, he only got in a nap or two at the climate summit, had to sleep in a luxury suite on a 747 on the …

President Joe Biden’s Schedule for Wednesday, November 3, 2021 is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

A Nudge Towards Compliance Through the Tyranny of Controlled Choice

by David Risselada –

Liberty depends upon the unfettered exercise of free choice. With this comes the idea that individuals accept the consequences of their poor decisions. After all, we learn to live better lives when we are free to learn from our mistakes. It has long been held in America that individuals make …

A Nudge Towards Compliance Through the Tyranny of Controlled Choice is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Beware of The USPS Man Bearing Weasel-Speak Presents

by cotobuzz –

Arguably the USPS played a pivotal role in the 2020 elections. FiveThirtyEight puts it this way: “We may have seen it coming, but now we know for sure: The coronavirus pandemic made the 2020 election look different from any other election in recent memory. Due to the massive expansion of mail voting, a staggering …

Beware of The USPS Man Bearing Weasel-Speak Presents is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Facebook To Shut Down Facial Recognition System, Delete Scans Of 1 Billion People

by Ailan Evans –

Facebook announced Tuesday it was shutting down its Face Recognition system and deleting the scans of over one billion people’s faces. Jerome Pesenti, vice president of artificial intelligence at Facebook, announced the changes in a blog post Tuesday, citing the technology’s possible negative effects as well as regulatory uncertainty as reasons …

Facebook To Shut Down Facial Recognition System, Delete Scans Of 1 Billion People is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Biden’s Commerce Secretary Is Trying To Shield A $42 Billion Broadband Funding Program From Public Eyes

by Ailan Evans –

Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo requested the inclusion of a provision in the bipartisan infrastructure bill shielding a $42 billion broadband funding program from public scrutiny, according to several people familiar with the matter. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, a $1.2 trillion piece of legislation that passed the Senate in …

Biden’s Commerce Secretary Is Trying To Shield A $42 Billion Broadband Funding Program From Public Eyes is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Teachers Break Down How Virginia Became The Ground Zero In The Education Culture War

by Kendall Tietz –

Education has become the forefront issue in the gubernatorial race between Republican Glenn Youngkin and Democrat Terry McAuliffe with Virginia taking center stage in the culture war erupting in school board rooms across the country. Issues regarding Critical Race Theory (CRT), gender ideology, vaccine mandates, mask requirements, school reopenings and …

Teachers Break Down How Virginia Became The Ground Zero In The Education Culture War is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Supreme Court Declines To Hear Appeal Of Ruling Forcing Hospitals To Perform Gender Transition Surgery

by Laurel Duggan –

The U.S. Supreme Court declined Monday to hear a case from a Catholic hospital challenging a ruling that forces it to sterilize patients through gender transition surgery. Evan Minton, a patient seeking uterus removal surgery as part of the gender transition process, will be allowed to go forward with suing …

Supreme Court Declines To Hear Appeal Of Ruling Forcing Hospitals To Perform Gender Transition Surgery is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

McAuliffe Falsely Claimed Youngkin Holding Event With Trump Night Before Election

by Laurel Duggan –

Democratic Virginia gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe claimed his Republican opponent, Glenn Youngkin, was campaigning with former President Donald Trump. “That was a lie,” Politico reported. Reporters told McAuliffe Sunday that Trump was not in Virginia and Youngkin was not involved in Trump’s event. McAuliffe responded that it was “killing” Trump …

McAuliffe Falsely Claimed Youngkin Holding Event With Trump Night Before Election is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Heroes to Zeros

by A.F. Branco –

First responders will lose their jobs unless they become vaccinated according to the Biden mandate. Political cartoon by A.F. Branco ©2021.

Heroes to Zeros is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Is it Time to Worry Yet?

by Ray Cardello –

My girlfriend and I had the chance to spend Saturday night with two couples of similar conservative thinking. It is rare that Sharon and I get a chance to spend quality time with friends without having to squelch our thoughts. We have many friends who are liberal, and you have …

Is it Time to Worry Yet? is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Joseph Biden – AKA President Gremlin

by John Green –

I’ve been telling everyone I know that Joe Biden is the dumbest chief executive to ever occupy the office.  I thought that was obvious, but I’ve gotten an amazing amount of pushback from other writers, friends, and even complete strangers.  It seems that there’s a widely held opinion by many, …

Joseph Biden – AKA President Gremlin is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

A Premeditated Crime Against America’s Most Disadvantaged Children

by John Eidson –

Why are America’s prisons filled with so many young black men? Are they inherently bad? Too shiftless to succeed? Too stupid to learn? Actually, none of the above. Most black men who do time were cheated out of a decent education by the inexcusably sorry public schools they had no …

A Premeditated Crime Against America’s Most Disadvantaged Children is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Today’s CRT is not Your grandpa’s CRT

by cotobuzz –

Before Flat Screen televisions, we had CRT  (Cathode Ray Tube) televisions powered by vacuum tubes and transistors.  At that time, integrated circuits were sparsely used. I studied these components in college while carrying a full load and working a full time job. At that time, we had one female student …

Today’s CRT is not Your grandpa’s CRT is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Can Virginia do it once again?

by JD Washington –

In what has become the most closely watched race in the nation, Virginia will go to the polls today to elect a new governor. The latest polls show the momentum behind Glenn Youngkin, a businessman turned politician for just this occasion. For the state of Virginia, this is really nothing …

Can Virginia do it once again? is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Yahoo Ending Operations In China Due To ‘Challenging’ Environment

by Ailan Evans –

Tech giant Yahoo will no longer conduct any business in China due to a challenging regulatory environment, the company announced Tuesday. “In recognition of the increasingly challenging business and legal environment in China, Yahoo’s suite of services will no longer be accessible from mainland China as of November 1,” a …

Yahoo Ending Operations In China Due To ‘Challenging’ Environment is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

This Day in History – November 02

by R. Mitchell –

Notable historical events that happened on November 2nd. 2000 The first crew to reside on the International Space Station arrived. 1976 Jimmy Carter was elected as the 39th president of the United States. 1947 Howard Hughes took the monstrous “Spruce Goose” aircraft into Long Beach Harbor and flew it approximately …

This Day in History – November 02 is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

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29.) PJ MEDIA

The Morning Briefing: GOP Diversity Ticket Trounces Racist CRT Dems in Virginia

AP Photo/Steve Helber, File

Top O’ the Briefing

Happy Wednesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Having beer and doughnuts when we arrive is my baseline for considering any space aliens we encounter as “intelligent life.”

Champagne hangover, anyone?

OK, I don’t have one but that’s only because I never keep any champagne around the house. There’s a habit I need to break. Last night was the first time in a few years that I felt like popping the old cork on an election night. It felt even better because I didn’t think it could happen. Just last week, I wrote that I didn’t think that Virginia Republicans could pull this off.

On occasion, I am quite happy to be wrong about something.

A.J. put it well:

Virginia Governor-elect Glenn Youngkin was fond of claiming on the campaign trail that he would end Terry McAuliffe’s 43-year political career. He did so Tuesday night in emphatic fashion, after McAuliffe ran a tone-deaf, smug campaign in a blue state.

It’s that smugness of McAuliffe’s that I’ve always found so off-putting. He’s the kind of singular non-talent who could only rise to any heights in politics, which rewards mediocrity like no other profession, especially on the Democrats’ side of the aisle.

As A.J notes, McAuliffe’s career is due largely to having been one of the awful hangers-on in the Clinton orbit. His loss is sure to send Granny Maojackets deeper into her box of breakfast Franzia today.

The election in Virginia was a very, very big deal for more than just the fact that Republicans have been an afterthought there for more than a decade. This is from Chris’s update post last night:

 

To the surprise of absolutely no one who’s been paying attention to the execrable members of the mainstream media, their response to this momentous occasion was to say that the Republicans won because of racism.

They’re not only evil, but they’re also lazy too.

As we have discussed on many occasions, the Democrats and their media mouthpieces are truly broken people. They were barely tethered to reality when Trump became the Republican nominee in 2016. His victory ripped them from any moorings they had. Now incapable of rational thought, all they can do is reflexively belch “Racism!” whenever bested by a Republican. They’ve got nothing else, which is why that’s all they’ve got in response to the Virginia results, despite the overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

They’re still lying about critical race theory, which is just going to keep making them dig deeper holes for themselves. There were stories about anti-CRT conservatives taking over school boards, like this one in Texas. Of course, NBC News spun that as the victors being anti-diversity. The biggest of the lies about CRT is that it’s “anti-racist,” which it is not. It’s racist, it’s commie, and it’s all about fomenting division.

It wasn’t just CRT that was on the ballot in Virginia last night, it was also a referendum on what the drooling idiot usurper in the Oval Office has done to the country since January. The media won’t dwell on that, though, they’re still tasked with carrying all of the water for President LOL Eightyonemillion.

I’ve been writing and saying for months that the egregious overreach by the Democrats would be their undoing. This is the first electoral manifestation of that.

So I’ll be bringing that up again. I get over being wrong once in a while by relishing a good “I told you so” whenever I can.

Congratulations, Virginia. Your commonwealth remains American for a while longer.

I’m off to see if any liberals think I’m a racist.

Everything Isn’t Awful

 

PJ Media

Wish Jeffrey Epstein were here to see this. Glenn Youngkin’s Win Officially Ends the Clinton Era in American Politics

VodkaPundit: Insanity Wrap: Blue Check Mafia Pooping Themselves Over ‘Let’s Go Brandon’

Virginia Election Results Are In

Minneapolis Voters Reject Dangerous Plan to Eliminate Police Department

Biden Predicted Victory in Virginia… With a Catch

Welp, We’ve Already Got Problems in Fairfax County, Virginia

Nations ‘Ghost Dancing’ at Climate Summit on Carbon Emissions

NYC Destroyer de Blasio Now Wants to Destroy New York State

Yeah, that was a lot of fun. McAuliffe Effort to Tie Youngkin to Trump Ends Up Tying Biden to McAuliffe

D.C. Jail Transfers Out 400 Prisoners for Disgusting, Inhumane Conditions—But Not a Single J6 Detainee

FBI Spy Video Shows Kyle Rittenhouse Being Chased Down at Kenosha Riot…Which Explains Why You’ve Never Seen It

This Is How Islam Mutilates Jesus Christ

[UPDATED] Virginia Voters Denied Entry to Polling Place for Refusing to Mask (But No ID, No Problem)

Speed-Dating Jury Selection Is Over in Rittenhouse Trial as Poll Shows 2/3 of Possible Jurors Think He’s Guilty as Hell

A Small Victory for Chicago Police Officers

The NCAA Made Election Day a Priority in 2020. This Year? Not so Much

Christian Persecution Group Wants to Know if Biden’s Muslim Religious Freedom Ambassador Will Help Non-Muslims

Not A Joke: Taliban Asks for International Aid to Help It Fight…Climate Change

Prager: Is Stealing Wrong? Not on the Left

BREAKING: House Republicans Request All Documents Concerning DOJ Targeting of Concerned Parents

Townhall Mothership

Update: Terry McAuliffe Refuses to Concede

Eric Adams Wins NYC Mayoral Election

Florida Democrats Inching Closer to Reality on Something About Ron DeSantis

Iowa Governor Signs Bill Allowing Workers Fired Over Vaccine Mandates to Obtain Unemployment Benefits

Oh. University Likened Unwoke Halloween Costumes to Rape and Murder

Chris Pratt Proves Dave Chappelle Is Right About Twitter

Ted Lieu Makes Eye-Opening Admission to the Media That Conservatives Need to Hear

Even Gun Control Fans Have Issues With Activist’s New Book

Cam&Co. Are Guns The Hidden Issue In The Virginia Elections?

God Bless America. October Gun Sales Second Highest On Record

Thunberg at COP 26 sings “You can shove your climate crisis up your” … Brandon?

Shocker: “Squid Game” crypto bubble pops as founders take off with the cash

The right’s concerns about illiberalism in education aren’t new

AWKWARD! MLB commissioner who moved All-Star Game out of Atlanta congratulates Braves for winning World Series   

‘Oh my God’: CNN’s Jake Tapper stunned as John King shares details about what’s happening in Virginia

He also thinks he’s part pony. President Biden doesn’t think anyone would trade this Thanksgiving for last Thanksgiving, even ‘as bad as things are’

VIP

The Left Hates Its Own Medicine: What We Can Learn From ‘Pilotgate’

Signal to Noise With Richard Fernandez

Democrats Hold Onto Their Precious COVID Issue

Fraud Watch: What’s Been Done to Secure Elections Since 2020?

Speaking Out on COVID-19 Vaccine Injuries Comes at a Cost—12 Physicians Take the Risk

Insane: Defense Attorney Tells Jury ‘You’ll Hear From’ Kyle Rittenhouse

George Takei’s False Equivalency Between Teaching CRT and Japanese Internment

WaPo Refuses to Publish Entire Trump Response to Its Jan. 6 Investigation

Biden the Magnificent Is Out of Magic Tricks

GOLD How Long Can They Pretend Biden’s Not Senile?

Around the Interwebz

Netflix Presses Play On Mobile Games, With First Offerings Including ‘Stranger Things’ Duo

New study suggests SARS-CoV-2 spreading widely within wild deer population 

Play-Doh’s New ’90s-Inspired Set Features Scents Based on VHS Rental Stores, Mall Food Courts, and More

Smells Like Onion

 

The Kruiser Kabana

Kabana Gallery

 

Kabana Tunes

30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER

 

Cut to the News
Cut through the clutter to today’s top news
November 3, 2021
Good morning Rick
Welcome to today’s top news.
Leading the News . . . 
Republican Glenn Youngkin shocks McAuliffe to win Va. governorship . . . Republican Glenn Youngkin pulled off an upset for the ages Tuesday night, defeating Democrat Terry McAuliffe in Virginia’s gubernatorial election, a result that sent a political shockwave across America ahead of next year’s midterm elections. In his victory speech, delivered before a roaring crowd shortly after 1 a.m., Youngkin called his win a “defining moment” and promised to “change the trajectory of this commonwealth.”
As Youngkin spoke, President Biden was descending the steps of Air Force One after returning to the US from Europe and landing in a very different political reality. With 99 percent of the expected vote in, Youngkin had 50.7 percent of the vote compared to 48.6 percent for McAuliffe, a margin of approximately 67,000 votes out of nearly 3.3 million ballots cast.
An exultant RNC statement proclaimed: “The red wave is here!” “This Republican sweep in Virginia is a resounding rebuke of the failed policies of Joe Biden and the Democrats,” the RNC said Virginians – and Americans across the country – are fed up with Biden’s divisive policies, failed leadership, and a Democrat agenda hurting working families. A Republican wave is coming in 2022, and Virginia is just the start.” New York Post
I can’t tell you how grateful and hopeful I am that we took back Virginia. I served as an election officer yesterday and was so proud to cast the very first vote at my precinct, exactly at 6 AM, as we opened up our polling place. 
I was watching closely for the “I&W” (indications and warnings, in intel parlance) whom the voters were likely to chose. Some conspicuously held blue or pink sample ballots, others wore red color masks and clothing, many had no indicators at all. I had red shoes on, carried a red purse and had hot-red nail polish on. 🙂
My area is super liberal, so it was amazed to see how many folks of various ethnicities — Iranians, Koreans, Indians, Chinese, and other Asians brought in pink sample ballots. I surprised one Russian couple when I spoke Russian to them as I was checking them in.
Serving as an election officer was a highly rewarding experience. Everyone on the team was professional, kind, and pleasant to work with. You could’t tell anyone’s political affiliation. I wish we could return to this kind of normalcy in our daily lives. Highly recommend it as an excellent way of serving our great country. I am totally doing it for the next Presidential election!
Rebekah
Politics                       
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Poll: Americans Say ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ Chant Is Appropriate Protest . . . Three-quarters of Americans familiar with the “Let’s Go Brandon” chant say it is an appropriate way to protest the Biden administration, according to a national poll. A majority of Americans—58 percent—are familiar with the chant, and 76 percent of those familiar with it find it an appropriate way to protest, according to a Trafalgar Group poll. The popular chant came into use after an NBC reporter in October interpreted shouts of “F— Joe Biden” from a crowd of NASCAR spectators as “Let’s Go Brandon.” Twenty-four percent of those familiar with it, however, find the chant inappropriate. The chant’s popularity comes as President Joe Biden contends with his administration’s plummeting approval rating, which went underwater in September. Only 43 percent approve of Biden, whereas 51 percent disapprove, according to the RealClearPolitics polling average. Washington Free Beacon
Joe Biden Took Stage Whisper On The Road — And Lied To Press At UN Climate Conference . . .  President Joe Biden broke into his often-used stage whisper during a press event Tuesday as the United Nations Climate Change Conference wrapped up in Glasgow, Scotland. Biden leaned in toward the microphone and claimed in an exaggerated whisper that the United States economy was on the rise. Daily Caller
GOP challenger Ciattarelli in dead heat with Gov. Phil Murphy . . . The gubernatorial race in New Jersey remained too close to call hours after the polls closed and Tuesday turned to Wednesday as both candidates held off on declaring victory, saying they will wait until “every vote” is counted. As votes were counted through the evening, Democratic incumbent Phil Murphy and Republican nominee Jack Ciattarelli had an intense back-and-forth, leapfrogging each other multiple times. Throughout the campaign, Murphy held a steady lead over Ciattarelli, despite the former businessman appearing to be closing in on the governor in a number of late polls. Murphy’s lead in the polls led many to believe Tuesday would be an easy win for the incumbent, sparking surprise for many when Ciattarelli held on so long. New York Post
Eric Adams Is Elected Mayor of New York City . . .  Eric Leroy Adams, a former New York City police captain whose attention-grabbing persona and keen focus on racial justice fueled a decades-long career in public life, was elected on Tuesday as the 110th mayor of New York and the second Black mayor in the city’s history. Mr. Adams, who will take office on Jan. 1, faces a staggering set of challenges as the nation’s largest city grapples with the enduring consequences of the pandemic, including a precarious and unequal economic recovery and continuing concerns about crime and the quality of city life, all shaped by stark political divisions over how New York should move forward. New York Times
Wonder whether the New Yorkers consider this development a “victory” for them and their families. Our family in NYC are reporting significant deterioration in security and overall normalcy in the city.
National Security     
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Biden switches back to Obama mode on nuclear-armed Iran . . . The US has dropped demands for Iran to halt ballistic missile development and regional destabilization aggression from the drive to renegotiate a nuclear deal with Iran. This was indicated by US President Joe Biden at the G20 summit taking place last week in Rome. He merely “pledged” that “if the US returns to the Iran nuclear agreement, it will only subsequently leave if Tehran clearly breaks the terms of the deal.” These demands were integral to Israel’s support for the diplomatic path Biden has advocated for the resolving the issue of a nuclear-armed Iran. DEBKAfile
Losing strategic control of the Panama Canal to the People’s Republic of China . . . A growing U.S.-People’s Republic of China (PRC) gray zone skirmish in Panama could have real national security implications for the United States. In the next few months, there are significant port and canal decisions that will be a bellwether gauging if China can continue to outmaneuver the United States in Latin America through its use of soft power, incentive-based bargaining, and the argument of a declining America. At stake is strategic control of the Panama Canal. The canal decision centers on a 50-year concession for a new water management system. This system will address the increasingly constrained water levels caused by drought and overuse that have worried canal officials for years. Multiple PRC companies have expressed interest in this project. With these two contracts, China would have an enormous lever of power to affect transshipment cargo operations. Beijing could use these companies as political agents to disrupt canal operations during a hot gray zone confrontation, exerting strategic control over this critical maritime chokepoint. Washington Times
International                
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COVID-19 Spreads to Beijing’s Political Center, Traveling Residents Not Allowed to Return . . . Beijing residents, traveling outside their city, are not allowed to return to the capital as authorities tighten COVID-19 measures in response to a rising number of cases in 16 provinces. Authorities announced Nov. 1 that Beijingers who had left the city should not come back any time soon. “If you have not yet returned to Beijing, please postpone your return to Beijing and cooperate with local prevention and control measures,” the Beijing Municipal Health Commission announced. The restriction measures reportedly caught many traveling Beijingers off guard, especially those who had a negative nucleic acid test certificate earlier within the required time of 48 hours. Epoch Times
China locks 30,000 visitors inside Shanghai Disneyland after one guest got Covid-19 . . . More than 30,000 visitors to the Shanghai Disneyland theme park were kept within the park’s gates on Sunday and forced to undergo Covid-19 testing after a customer tested positive for the virus, a move that underscores China’s eradication efforts. With fireworks exploding above them as they awaited nasal swabs, the Disney visitors became the latest Chinese residents to experience life under a “zero tolerance” policy for the virus enforced by their country’s government. Leaders there have taken stringent measures to contain pockets of the coronavirus in the country, despite criticism from business groups and a close to 80% vaccination rate. “I never thought that the longest queue in Disneyland would be for a nucleic acid test,” one visitor said on social media. Fox Business
Well, it won’t long before the Biden Dictatorship Crew imports such tactics to America. They are coming to the theater near you sooner than we might think.
CDC Places Russia on Highest COVID-19 Travel Warning Listing . . . The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) added Russia to its highest travel risk category for COVID-19 on Monday, following a surge in new positive coronavirus cases. The CDC designated Russia as a Level 4 rating following reports that the nation has reached more than 500 positive COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people for the past four consecutive weeks. Russia also hit a record of 1,163 COVID-19 deaths on Friday, according to The Associated Press. “Avoid travel to Russia. If you must travel to Russia, make sure you are fully vaccinated before travel,” the CDC’s website says regarding Level 4 countries. Epoch Times
Guess ‘Sputnik’ did’t quite cut it. Shocking.
Coronavirus
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Psaki news underscores risks and safety protocols for Biden . . . White House officials say they’re taking all necessary precautions to keep President Biden from contracting COVID-19, following the news that press secretary Jen Psaki had been diagnosed with the virus. Psaki, who is vaccinated, is just the latest person in Biden’s orbit to contract COVID-19. While the president is vaccinated and has taken a booster shot, he is also 78 years old, which puts him at a higher risk if he does contract COVID-19. Vaccinations make it much less likely that a person will be hospitalized from COVID-19 or that it will be fatal.  The Hill
Money                           
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Foreign automakers mount push against EV tax credit . . . Opposition to President Biden’s electric vehicle (EV) tax credit proposal is growing as Democrats race to complete their $1.75 trillion climate and social spending package that will shape the nation’s transition away from gasoline-powered cars.
Under the current plan, most EVs would qualify for a $7,500 tax credit, and union-built EVs assembled in the U.S. would receive an additional $4,500 in credits. Only Ford, General Motors and Stellantis, Chrysler’s parent company, qualify for the extra incentive, a measure that could make customers more likely to buy their EVs to take advantage of the larger credit.
The proposal is drawing intense backlash from foreign-owned carmakers and even foreign governments. They’re lobbying Democrats to make last-minute changes as lawmakers ready their reconciliation package for a vote. The Hill
Dems Propose Massive Tax Cut for Rich in Budget Deal . . .
Reinstatement of SALT deduction carries larger price tag than welfare programs. Congressional Democrats are finalizing a half-trillion-dollar tax cut for the wealthy, a provision larger than any new welfare program in the budget reconciliation. Reinstating the State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction will cost an estimated $500 billion, more than 2.5 times the size of the child tax credit and earned income tax credit combined. The provision allows taxpayers to deduct the amount they pay in state and local income, property tax, and sales tax from their reported federal income. Under the 2017 GOP tax cut, the SALT deduction was capped at $10,000. The Democratic plan would make it unlimited for five years. Washington Free Beacon
America will have digital dollars accessible through smartphones and computers within a few years . . .  Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard, who may be the next Fed Chairman or Vice Chairman for Supervision, have expressed strong interest in a digital currency. The benefits are compelling. Most Americans receive paychecks, social security benefits and other payments digitally through direct deposit. They can swap those funds for paper currency or write checks, but these days most payments are made through credit and debit cards and electronic transfers. Usually, household and business payers and payees have accounts at different commercial banks, and banks have their accounts at the Federal Reserve. Payments from consumers and businesses first move through their bank’s internal and sponsored credit-card systems. Then various Federal Reserve systems distribute funds to the banks where landlords, merchants and suppliers have their accounts. Washington Times
You should also know 
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Record fentanyl seizures at border contributed to soaring overdose deaths in US . . . Fentanyl seizures by federal law enforcement inspecting goods and people attempting to enter the United States from abroad shot up over the past 12 months, more than doubling the record-high level confiscated a year earlier. The surge in U.S. Customs and Border Protection seizures at the nation’s border is closely connected to the surge of drug overdose deaths occurring deep inside the U.S., which also hit a new high this year as a result of the prevalence of opioids. Washington Examiner
US regulators sue to stop Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster merger . . . US regulators have sued to block the merger of Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster, which would have created a mega-publisher in the US books market, in one of the Biden administration’s most significant antitrust moves yet. Bertelsmann, which owns Penguin Random House, last November struck a $2.2bn deal to acquire Simon & Schuster from ViacomCBS, significantly outbidding Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp in a deal that aimed to merge the companies behind some of the world’s most popular authors, from EL James and Stephen King to George Orwell and F Scott Fitzgerald.
The justice department alleged that the two companies would control more than two-thirds of the market for acquiring publishing rights after merging, squeezing advances and resulting in “substantial harm to authors of anticipated top-selling books and ultimately, consumers”, according to a lawsuit filed on Tuesday at Washington federal court. Financial Times
Guess what sorts of books this mega-publisher would be releasing and which ones suppressing?
U.S. Navy Memorial unveils statue honoring war dogs, first in nation’s capital . . . The statue will join exhibits permanently at the memorial’s visitors center in recognition of all “men and women of the sea services” and “the canines who fought and died for our country,” sculptor Susan Bahary told The Washington Times. The bronze statue depicts Navy sailor John Douangdara and his Belgian Malinois, Bart. Both died in Afghanistan when Taliban fighters shot down their helicopter in August 2011. The attack killed all 29 service members aboard, including 17 Navy SEALS.
Modeled on a photograph taken in Afghanistan, the larger-than-life statue depicts the sailor seated with his right hand holding a gun and his left hand touching the dog. Douangdara, the lead dog handler for Seal Team 6, had prepared Bart as a “force multiplier” to assist with a rescue operation on the day they died.
“The Navy Memorial is proud that we will host the statue honoring Petty Officer Douangdara and Military Working Dog Bart, both of whom gave their lives for the United States,” said retired Rear Adm. Frank Thorp, president and CEO of the memorial. Washington Times
Guilty Pleasures        
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Terry McAuliffe Shaves Head, Gets Nazi Tattoo To Warn Everyone About Glenn Youngkin . . . In a final plea to Virginia voters, Democrat candidate Terry McAuliffe shaved his head and got a Nazi tattoo to warn everyone about the fascism that will come to the state if Republican Glenn Youngkin is elected Governor.  “I hope this serves as a dire warning to you Virginian voters,” said a bald Younkin over the buzz of a tattoo needle drawing a swastika on his face. “Glenn Youngkin is literally a Nazi and he’ll do all the Nazi things if you elect him. And if you vote for him, you ain’t black!”
McAuliffe then posed for photographs holding a tiki torch with Ralph Northam, who was wearing his finest KKK uniform. “This is what is coming to Virginia if you elect Republicans!” they said gravely to the gathered press. “Heil Hitler! May the Third Reich reign for 5,000 years!” They then performed a Hitler salute.
Democrat activists are also spreading the word by marching through the streets in Nazi uniforms rounding up minorities and sending them to concentration camps in a vivid warning of what Republicans want to do to the citizens of Virginia.
McAuliffe and Youngkin will be holding a KKK rally this evening in a last-minute appeal to voters. Babylon Bee
Satire.
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Serving as an Election Officer in Virginia. Guess whom my vote went to yesterday?! 🙂
Rebekah Koffler
Editor, White House Dossier and Cut to the News
Please support my work by ordering Putin’s Playbook. If you’ve read it, please leave a review on Amazon. Thank you!
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31.) THE DISPATCH

Youngkin Turns Virginia Red

What lessons will Republicans and Democrats draw from Republican Glenn Youngkin’s victory?

Happy Wednesday! Last night, an underdog from the South that analysts all but wrote off over the summer rallied to defeat the winner from a few years ago—all while keeping the fan favorite on the sidelines. Congratulations to the Atlanta Braves on winning the World Series!

P.S. It should be illegal for Game 6 of the World Series to fall on Election Night.

P.P.S. We are making the full version of this newsletter available today on our website. Of course, we still hope you’ll consider joining us as member.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • Centers for Disease Control Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky on Tuesday formally endorsed the CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices’s recommendation that children ages 5 to 11 receive Pfizer-BioNTech’s pediatric COVID-19 vaccine. The move paves the way for children to begin receiving shots as soon as today.
  • News outlets officially projected Tuesday night that Republican Glenn Youngkin will defeat Democrat Terry McAuliffe in the race to become Virginia’s next governor. Youngkin declared victory last night, but McAuliffe has yet to concede. Republicans Winsome Sears and Jason Miyares are also projected to win the state’s lieutenant governor and attorney general races, respectively.
  • New Jersey’s gubernatorial race between incumbent Democrat Phil Murphy and Republican challenger Jack Ciattarelli remained too close to call as of Wednesday morning, with Ciattarelli leading Murphy by roughly 1,200 votes with 88 percent of the vote counted. Per NJ.com, many of the outstanding votes are in heavily Democratic precincts.
  • Democrat Eric Adams is projected to win New York City’s mayoral race easily over Republican Curtis Sliwa, while Byron Brown—Buffalo’s incumbent mayor who mounted a longshot write-in campaign after losing in the Democratic primary—appears poised to defeat self-declared socialist India Walton and secure a fifth consecutive term. Democrat Michelle Wu was projected the winner of Boston’s mayoral race, and incumbent Jacob Frey is leading in the Minneapolis mayoral race after the first round of ranked-choice voting. Minneapolis voters also rejected a ballot initiative that would have replaced the city’s police force with a new Department of Public Safety.
  • Ethiopia’s Council of Ministers declared a state of national emergency on Tuesday as the country’s civil war escalates and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front closes in on the capital city of Addis Ababa. U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai announced yesterday the United States will suspend duty-free access to Ethiopian exports effective January 1, 2022, due to the “gross violations of internationally recognized human rights” occurring in the country’s northern region.
  • An attack on Kabul’s Sardar Mohammad Daud Khan military hospital on Tuesday killed at least 25 people—including a senior Taliban military leader—and wounded more than a dozen others. ISIS-K took responsibility for the attack, which included multiple suicide bombings and what one doctor in the hospital described as gunmen walking through a hospital ward and shooting wounded Taliban fighters in the head.

Youngkin Triumphs in Virginia

(Photograph by Audrey Fahlberg / The Dispatch)

With Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam term-limited out, Virginia was always going to have a new governor come January 2022. Last night, we finally found out who it’ll be, as Republican Glenn Youngkin defeated Democrat Terry McAuliffe on Tuesday in the highest-profile election of 2021.

McAuliffe—seeking to reclaim the post he held from 2014 to 2018—led Youngkin in public polling throughout the summer, at times by as many as 8 percentage points. But the former private equity executive surged in the final days of the campaign, and Youngkin’s momentum carried him to—as of early Wednesday morning—somewhere between a 2- and 3-point victory on a cold and rainy day in the Old Dominion. Although the television networks took hours to call the race, Decision Desk HQ and Dave Wasserman of the Cook Political Report declared Youngkin the winner approximately 90 minutes after the polls closed.

“My fellow Virginians, we stand here this morning at this defining moment,” Youngkin told a crowd of supporters in a 1 a.m. speech declaring victory. “Let’s reinvigorate this amazing commonwealth of Virginia. Together, we can build a new day.” McAuliffe spoke earlier in the evening, but did not concede.

Although still considered a swing state by some, Virginia had been trending blue for more than a decade. Its electoral votes last went to a GOP presidential candidate in 2004, and no Republican had been elected to statewide office since 2009. McAuliffe defeated Republican Ken Cuccinelli in the 2013 gubernatorial race by slightly less than 3 percentage points, and Democrat Ralph Northam trounced Republican Ed Gillespie by 9 four years later. Tuesday reversed that trend: Not only did Youngkin emerge victorious, but Republicans Winsome Sears (lieutenant governor) and Jason Miyares (attorney general) did as well.

“Glenn ran an excellent and inspiring campaign that raises the bar for candidates across the country,” said Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, chair of the Republican Governors Association (RGA). “Unlike his opponent, Glenn didn’t need a cast of national surrogates to do his work for him; he connected directly with voters on issues that matter to Virginians.”

From TMD, to The Sweep, to standalone pieces on the site, we’ve spent plenty of time in recent weeks dissecting McAuliffe and Youngkin’s respective campaign strategies. While McAuliffe sought to nationalize the race by invoking former President Donald Trump at every opportunity and campaigning alongside high-profile Democrats like President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, and former President Barack Obama, Youngkin zeroed in on kitchen table issues like K-12 education, taxes, and public safety.

“Glenn is being very specific about Virginia-specific plans,” RGA spokeswoman Maddie Anderson told The Dispatch last week. “[McAuliffe] is trying to nationalize this race month because there’s just no enthusiasm there, and that’s his only option.”

Youngkin ran on a platform of eliminating Virginia’s grocery tax, suspending a recent gas tax hike, and doubling the standard deduction on state income taxes. He supports qualified immunity for police officers, and has said he wants to fire Virginia’s parole board to keep violent criminals behind bars. He pledged to keep schools open for in-person instruction five days a week, build at least 20 charter schools to increase choice for parents, and ban the teaching of critical race theory in K-12 education.

The last point in particular became a defining feature of the campaign after McAuliffe said in a debate that he didn’t think “parents should be telling schools what they should teach.” Whether or not his interpretation of loco parentis was correct, the gaffe cost McAuliffe dearly as Youngkin plastered it on the airwaves and crafted a message aimed specifically at parents in the race’s closing weeks. A Fox News poll from late last week showed the race flipping from 51-46 McAuliffe to 53-46 Youngkin in just two weeks. The Democratic candidate’s misleading rebuttal—that Youngkin wants to “ban books by prominent black authors”—fell more or less flat.

What It All Means

Arriving at sweeping conclusions based only on a handful of data points is, more often than not, a fool’s errand. But it’s difficult to interpret Tuesday’s election results—both in Virginia and elsewhere—as anything other than a striking rebuke of the Democratic Party’s first 10 months in power at the federal level.

In the 2020 election, Biden carried Virginia by 10 points, and New Jersey by 16. Just one year later—with Biden’s net approval rating lower than all of his predecessors’ at this point in their presidency save Trump and Gerald Ford—McAuliffe lost the former by about 2 points, and New Jersey’s Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy is neck-and-neck with Jack Ciattarelli, a Republican who never led a public poll. Murphy is still likely to pull ahead as the last tranche of ballots are counted, but 12- and 16-point one-year swings are indicative of a fundamental change in the electorate. Partisans got to work quickly on Tuesday sussing out what happened—and whether the shift had more to do with who was on the ballot or who wasn’t.

The finger pointing began almost immediately on the Democratic side, with the party’s various factions predictably blaming the loss(es) on their intra-party opponents. “The DC establishment consolidated support behind their one-time rainmaker and in doing so sidelined two potentially history-making Black women running for the same office,” read a joint statement on the “Virginia shellacking” from a host of progressive organizations. “There should be no questions or scapegoats about why specific demographics didn’t turn out. Terry McAuliffe offered an uninspired return to yesterday, while voters were focused on what must come next.”

Rep. Dean Phillips, a moderate Democrat from Minnesota, came away from last night with the exact opposite conclusion. “Once again, the electoral evidence indicates that America is not as progressive as socialist members believe it is,” he told The Hill. Byron Brown’s apparent write-in victory over self-declared socialist India Walton in Buffalo’s mayoral race—as well as Minneapolis voters’ rejection of a ballot initiative that would have swapped out the city’s police force with a new “Department of Public Safety” and Seattle’s election of a Republican candidate for city attorney over one favoring police abolition—provided three additional data points in support of Phillips’ thesis.

If that takeaway is internalized, it could spell doom for Biden’s congressional Build Back Better agenda, which is currently being held together by a rusty paperclip and some old chewing gum. “If you are a Democrat sitting on Capitol Hill and you are from one of these swing districts in suburban areas, are you rethinking tonight your vote on this reconciliation package?” former Obama adviser David Axelrod told CNN.

Democrats were, however, able to find one area of agreement: They need to shut up about Trump. “Terry McAuliffe ran the milquetoast campaign he wanted to run—where every other word he uttered was ‘Donald Trump’ instead of focusing on the issues voters cared about the most,” the progressive groups wrote. Phillips, meanwhile, posited that “ignoring rural America and focusing too much on a former president and not enough on the future is a poor recipe for electoral success.”

A Republican strategist concurs. “The effort to try to basically make every Republican out to be a mini version of Trump is not a very wise strategy,” David Kochel told The Dispatch yesterday.

It’s advice that Democratic nominee should have heeded, and advice that the GOP one did.

Aside from September’s recall election in California, the Virginia gubernatorial race presented Republicans with their first high-profile opportunity to build a winning coalition in a post-Trump world, and Youngkin pulled off the necessary balancing act damn near perfectly.

After prevailing in the Virginia GOP’s ranked-choice voting convention back in May that saved the party from nominating a more unelectable candidate, Youngkin proceeded to campaign for the general election almost as if the former president didn’t exist. He accepted Trump’s endorsement but never campaigned with him; he embraced culture war fights without adopting Trump’s mean-spirited tone; after winning the primary, he admitted that Biden’s election was “legitimate” and “certifiably fair,” and condemned January 6 as “sickening and wrong” without making it a defining issue of his campaign.

The result? Youngkin held onto Trump’s base, but expanded it, outperforming the former president’s 2020 showing by over six percentage points. By cultivating an image less toxic to independent and Democratic voters, the Virginia Republican was able to chip away at McAuliffe’s margins in the populous Loudoun and Fairfax counties, securing about 38 percent of the vote yesterday to Trump’s 31 percent in 2020.

The blueprint will be replicated. “This is going to inform candidates and campaigns how to sort of walk the line of not having to embrace the style, the tactics of Donald Trump, while at the same time, not trying to intentionally distance yourself from Trump’s voters,” Kochel said. On Tuesday night, Youngkin’s chief strategist Jeff Roe essentially said that’s exactly what they set out to do: “We weren’t defined by Obama, we weren’t defined by Trump, we were defined by Glenn.”

A certain someone might quibble with that characterization—and throw a wrinkle in that blueprint down the road. “​​I would like to thank my BASE for coming out in force and voting for Glenn Youngkin,” Trump said in a statement last night. “Without you, he would not have been close to winning. The MAGA movement is bigger and stronger than ever before.”

Ronna McDaniel, chairwoman of the Republican Party, drew a similar, if misguided, conclusion. “Terry McAuliffe and Democrats tried to run against Trump in Virginia but their strategy backfired,” she wrote. “President Trump continues to be a huge boost for Republicans across the country.”

Worth Your Time

  • It’s not everyday someone we quote in TMD answers our Let Us Know question in a post of their own—but Ilya Somin did just that. “If the Texas SB subterfuge works, it will create a roadmap for undermining judicial protection for a wide range of other constitutional rights,” he writes in a Reason piece explaining his preference for the Supreme Court allowing challenges to Texas’ abortion law proceed.

Presented Without Comment

Toeing the Company Line

  • Yesterday’s Uphill featured an update on Harvest and Haley’s Uyghur refugee story from two weeks ago. “We spoke with several members of Congress and experts who work on these issues, and most were surprised to learn the United States didn’t resettle any Uyghurs through the refugee program in fiscal year 2021,” they write. “That’s partly because the State Department stopped sharing reports with this kind of information last year.”
  • David’s Tuesday French Press (🔒) is a lamentation on the state of our politics, and a proposal for something better. “While it is absolutely the case that our nation is awash in conspiracy theories and paranoia, there is enough absolutely real intolerance and illiberalism on both sides of the political spectrum to cause rational people to be tempted to retreat toward tribalism as a means of perceived self-defense and self-preservation,” he writes. “This gets me back to the third-party concept. And it makes me think of the possibility of a reboot. A fresh start.”

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@lawsonreports), Audrey Fahlberg (@AudreyFahlberg), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).


32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION

Iowa State University Prof Working to Advance ‘Fat Justice’

University of Washington Mental Wellness Program Includes Racism and Microaggressions

Video: Bill Maher Calls Out Critical Race Theory

 

  • William Jacobson: “PARENTS TAKE CONTROL OF VIRGINIA – They Lead Glenn Youngkin To Victory Over Terry McAuliffe
  • Mary Chastain: “The Republicans destroyed the Democrats in Virginia. Bloodbath. I’d say I thought I was watching a John Wick movie but some woke leftist would get triggered and think I meant it literally.”
  • Leslie Eastman: “California doesn’t deserve In-N-Out Burger anymore.”
  • David Gerstman: “Just two tweets. First, Ben Shapiro, “Condolences to VA on becoming radically racist again according to the media…by electing by electing a black female lieutenant governor and a Cuban-American attorney general, rejecting racial essentialism in schools, and replacing a Dem governor who wore an actual KKK outfit.” Second, Drew Holden. I can’t summarize it, you just have to click on the link. And New Jersey’s governor’s race becomes surprisingly competitive. Okay, three tweets.”

 

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33.) THE DAILY WIRE

 


34.) DESERET NEWS


35.) BRIGHT

 

Wednesday, November 3, 2021

The Culture War IS the Big Tent
The conventional wisdom among Republican consultants up and down the Acela corridor for the last few decades was always to leave those icky cultural issues alone and focus on tax cuts and deregulation. Moderates, particularly suburban women, they said, are turned away from the GOP by a focus on “rube issues;” topics that might get a person labeled “racist” or “bigoted” at a dinner party. Fiscally conservative, socially moderate, that was the sweet spot to woo 50.1% of independents.

That conventional wisdom was probably always bunk, but yesterday it was dealt a death blow in Virginia, where Republican Glenn Youngkin rode to victory over Democrat Terry McAuliffe, in a state that went for Biden by ten points, largely by focusing on critical race theory and radical indoctrination in public schools. Virginia is a state, moreover, with a heavily college-educated, suburban, managerial class-wealthy voting population – exactly the kind of voters thought lost to the GOP forever.

Youngkin fits the typical profile of a Republican running in an uphill battle state in many ways; he’s certainly no Donald Trump rhetorically, (although CNN contributor Van Jones called his brand of politics “the Delta variant of Trumpism”) and he’s quite moderate on not a few policy issues.

But he is like Trump in one respect: he made a campaign centerpiece out of pushing back on Democrats’ increasing cultural radicalism. Trump may have broken the ice on putting the culture war front and center, but the Virginia race is showing the popularity of that focus isn’t limited to the hardcore Trump right. Running against critical race theory, gender ideology, indoctrination in schools and other cultural hot button issues actually brings in moderates and even Democrats who may disagree on other issues, like government healthcare or taxes.

As I’ve been saying for a while, the “economics trumps all” view of politics doesn’t quite hit the mark, and is often delivered, whether on the left or right, with a kind of “What’s the Matter with Kansas?” type of condescension. It’s entirely possible for someone in the center, or even left of center, to prioritize concerns about their children being taught to rank themselves by racial privilege or their daughters losing team spots and locker room space to biological males, even over budget-busting healthcare premiums or other traditionally left-leaning priorities (although those inflationary prices can’t have helped Democrats).

Not only is waging unapologetic culture war – meaning strong and brave pushback on all types of woke leftist narratives whether they come from schools, media, or big corporations – a winning strategy for the Republican Party, it’s the most important thing we can do to back off from the cultural disunion we’re hurtling towards.

Youngkin’s victory in Virginia should show Republicans what they need to do to win. As for getting the country off its current disastrous cultural trajectory, well, that’ll require actually following through and prioritizing legislation that throws a wrench in the left’s domination of every institution in and out of government.

Why do we find ourselves, at this late date, in a situation where public schools feel free to actively teach America’s future voters to hate their country? Because the Republican Party and the right more generally abandoned every cultural institution to the left decades ago, and dismissed the increasing radicalism seeping out of academia into K12 as the fringe views of the faculty lounge.

As I wrote back when cities burned in 2020 in the midst of the riots that summer:

“Well before protesters spilled into the streets in 2020, the largest national teachers’ union gave its official stamp of approval to Black Lives Matter and to indoctrinating teachers with the concept of ‘white fragility’ and its supposed cause, ‘white supremacy culture,’ as part of professional development. The effort to re-educate the nation’s teachers in the left’s radical image will also likely be accelerated due to the protests…

The cultural revolutionaries produced by our education system then advance into corporations, tech startups, Hollywood, sports, and of course, media.
If conservatives ever believed the canard that safe-space social justice warriors would implode on impact with the “real world,” now’s the time to forget that happy notion. They’re not John Mayer, waiting on the world to change; they’re remaking the world as they see fit, consistent with what they’ve been taught from K-12 to the highest echelons of learning…

Where the right finds itself today is a direct consequence of its appalling failure to take culture, and the institutions that shape it, at least as seriously as it takes tax cuts, deregulation, and economic growth. I like taking home more of my paycheck as much as the next person, but minor economic reforms will not change the overall trajectory of the country if its schools and academies continue to preach disunion instead of e pluribus unum.”

If conservatives get another bite at the national apple in 2022 and 2024, they’d better not squander it on tax cuts. Because with our education system churning out new ranks of cultural revolutionaries every year, it may be the last bite they get if they don’t use their political capital to force some transformative institutional shakeup. And no institution has been more of an asset to the radical left in the past decades than our education system, Kindergarten through graduate school.

Further Election Notes
To preempt that narrative you’ll be hearing from the corporate media outlets today about racist Virginians being rabble roused by the “fake” Loudoun County rape coverup story, Emily Jashinsky has got you covered in The Federalist:

“The detractors here pride themselves on rationality, but are so easily seduced by the appearance of an opportunity to make a “both sides suck” point that they’re undercutting a report that, in this case, does not suck. Indeed, it shed light on the incompetent and corrupt handling of a teenage girl’s alleged rape that nobody else was interested in pursuing…

Young and Soave are correct that Rosiak’s story did not mention the restroom had been used by the alleged victim and aggressor for prior, consensual encounters. I fully agree that’s a relevant detail and should have been in the story if it was dug up in the course of Rosiak’s reporting (which I don’t know). That said, it does not in any way undercut the report’s news value as “a cautionary tale about the supposed dangers of letting trans students use women’s bathrooms,” as Soave wrote…

What Rosiak reported may have been incomplete, but that’s common practice and whether something is incomplete is impossible to know until more details emerge. Singal’s point is relevant, but hardly discredits the full report. If you’re charitable, it supports the story, and if you’re uncharitable, it was uncritical of Smith and overly sympathetic to his narrative. But it doesn’t change that Rosiak reported a big story that reasonable people can interpret as evidence of teenagers of opposite sexes getting easier access to restrooms, where supervision is difficult.

Also writing in Reason, Matt Welch helpfully documented the “journalist butchery” of parent protests in Loudoun and other communities. The legacy media is distorting the policies and parents’ reactions. Apolitical people like Smith, who are risking their livelihoods to stand up for their kids, are being smeared. Rosiak and the members of conservative media who saw a “cautionary tale” in his report are not examples of such incompetence.

The theatrical nitpicking of Rosiak and conservative media is not reasonable, it’s the sudden embrace of a standard that would render all investigative journalism impossible. Partisanship is a helluva drug, even if your party happens to be no party at all.”

Don’t miss John Daniel Davidson on the importance of the Virginia election either.
Finally, a cherry on the sundae for this Election Night issue: even the left-wing city of Minneapolis rejected a “defund the police” ballot measure. The city of Buffalo went with writing in their previous, more moderate mayor over a progressive challenger. And even in deep-blue New Jersey, as of late yesterday evening, the race was much closer than expected. Sadly as expected, however, went the mayoral race in New York City, with my beloved cat maniac and beret afficionado Curtis Sliwa falling to Democrat Eric Adams, who at least has the benefit of being less insane than DeBlasio.

On Narcissism Masquerading as Empathy
In a total gear switch, I’d like to bring your attention to this very thoughtful essay on Substack about art and empathy by a writer I hadn’t previously read, Alice Gribbin.

In key part:

“Psychologists and cognitive scientists clamor to prove a link between empathy and art, so ripe is the desire to brand the old supposition a scientific fact. In this new century, scholars, educators, curators, arts writers, museum administrators, and cultural critics have made empathy their great basis for defending and promoting the arts. As they now see it, encounters with artworks engage and strengthen our ability to empathize, and herein lies art’s value to humankind.

A thinking person might ask, If the value of art is not in the art itself but in the empathy it fosters, what’s the value of that? By activating our inborn capacity for empathy, the reasoning goes, art can be a tool of social transformation—an unadulterated good…

This results-based management of aesthetic experience inevitably treats as superfluous all but a sliver of the responses in an individual that great art enlivens. Unruly imagination, with its proclivity for the carnal and macabre, the empath shuns. Personal connection is all: On this basis alone are a work’s formal and material qualities interesting. Awe, for the empath, is a feeling of intense connection between her and the artist or the artist’s subject. Cleaved from its etymology, awe is no longer an experience of dread and reverence, a response to the majestic or uncanny. Such elements in art are beside the point.

So too are entire works that do not elicit empathy for their characters, subject, or maker. The empathy racket treats as automatically canonical any art that memorializes certain historical events, art as documentary, and art of witness, whatever its quality or degree of originality. Those forces inexplicable to the human, which great art from Hellenistic sculpture to the Jodhpur-Marwar court paintings to Modernist poetry has concerned itself with—forces unconscious, spiritual, natural, chthonic—do not interest the empath.”

This is all quite fascinating, but I think kind of guts the definition of empathy, at least as I understand it. “I identify with that” is the death knell of actual empathy, which is supposed to be about a sympathetic understanding with someone or something truly different than oneself. Constantly looking for yourself in others, in art, politics, and everywhere is narcissism, not empathy.

A subcategory of this kind of “empathic” thinking is imagining that children of color have nothing to learn from the Western canon because they can’t “see” themselves in it. First of all, what an extraordinarily stunted view of the human person you betray yourself as holding, that you see this fraction of identity (race, sex, gender, class) as all that matters, but second and more relevantly to the point about empathy: why are you looking only for yourself anyway?

In any case, worth your read!

Podcast Update
On this episode of High Noon, I spoke with National Review senior writer David Harsanyi, author of the new book Eurotrash: Why America Must Reject the Failed Ideas of a Dying Continent.

Harsanyi busts some common American myths about the superiority of European healthcare systems, welfare state payments, and tolerance of diverse newcomers with hard facts that compare apples to apples, warning that America risks not only its success but the heart of its distinctive culture if it follows the European path.

Fashion Moment of the Week
In honor of election szn, a selection of fashion picks from Vogue U.K. based on Succession’s Shiv Roy’s style of tailored, high-waisted trousers, turtlenecks, silk blouses, and more. How to do politician style right.

Wednesday Links
It’s not just the governor’s mansion Virginia Dems are poised to lose. (The Federalist)

Hilarious meltdown reax over VA from the corporate media. (The Federalist)

Biden is making the world a more dangerous place. (Spectator)

No, white people didn’t invent slavery and conquest – but some in woke academia seem to think so. (Washington Examiner)

Joe Biden’s climate change speech was music to the ears of Chinese coal and Russian gas. (The Federalist)

A roundup of responses to James Poulos’s new book Human Forever, a must-read in the age of Zuckerberg’s metaverse. (American Mind)

BRIGHT is brought to you by The Federalist.
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Today’s BRIGHT Editor

Inez Feltscher Stepman is a senior policy analyst at the Independent Women’s Forum and a senior contributor to The Federalist. She is a San Francisco Bay Area native with a BA in Philosophy from UCSD and a JD from the University of Virginia. She lives in Washington, D.C. with her husband, Jarrett Stepman, her puggle Thor, and her cat Thaddeus Kosciuszko. You can follow her on Twitter at @inezfeltscher and on Instagram (for #ootd, obvi) under the same handle. Opinions expressed on this website are her own and not those of her employers. Or her husband.
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER

 

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Expect all hell to break loose within the Democrat party, with powerful key factions at each others’ throats.  Read more…


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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL

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IN THIS ISSUE:

– Republican Sweep in Virginia Sets off Alarm Bells for Democrats

Republican Sweep in Virginia Sets off Alarm Bells for Democrats
After picking Youngkin in Old Dominion, Crystal Ball shifts several Democratic Senate seats to Toss-up
By Kyle Kondik and J. Miles Coleman
Sabato’s Crystal Ball

Dear Readers: Join us tomorrow, Thursday, Nov. 4, from 6:30 p.m.* to 8 p.m. for our annual American Democracy Conference. The virtual event will begin with a presentation by Project Home Fire’s Larry Schack and Mick McWilliams on our ongoing polling and data analytics project. They will be followed by discussions on the state of politics moderated by Carah Whaley, Assistant Director of the James Madison Center for Civic Engagement, and featuring UVA Center for Politics resident scholars Jamelle Bouie, David Ramadan, and Tara Setmayer; former Rep. Barbara Comstock (R, VA-10); and Crystal Ball Managing Editor Kyle Kondik.The free, virtual event will be available at this link: https://livestream.com/tavco/uvacfp-adc2021

*The start time is now 6:30 p.m., not 6 p.m.

— The Editors

KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE

— Republicans swept Virginia on Tuesday night, winning statewide for the first time in a dozen years and running much better than they did in the Trump years.

— The result helps confirm a poor environment for Democrats, which if replicated next November could help the Republicans win back the House and the Senate.

— As such, we’re changing several Senate ratings to reflect improved odds of Republicans flipping that chamber next year. The changes are shown in Table 1:

Table 1: Crystal Ball Senate rating changes

Senator Old Rating New Rating
Mark Kelly (D-AZ) Leans Democratic Toss-up
Michael Bennet (D-CO) Safe Democratic Likely Democratic
Raphael Warnock (D-GA) Leans Democratic Toss-up
C. Cortez Masto (D-NV) Leans Democratic Toss-up

Virginia and its revelations

There were a lot of electoral questions that the Virginia gubernatorial race was well-positioned to help answer. Could Republicans make up ground in the suburbs with Donald Trump no longer in the White House? Would Republican voters turn out in force with Trump gone? Could Democrats fall even further in heavily white, rural/small town areas? Was the history that suggested holding the White House is a burden for the presidential party in Virginia still operative?

Unfortunately for Democrats, and fortunately for Republicans, the answers to all of these questions were a resounding “yes.”

As the Crystal Ball projected on Monday, Glenn Youngkin (R) won the Virginia gubernatorial race last night, defeating former Democratic Gov. Terry McAuliffe. Youngkin’s win was part of a larger GOP sweep, as fellow Republicans Winsome Sears and Jason Miyares captured the lieutenant governor and attorney general posts, respectively. It also appears, as of this writing, that Republicans have taken the majority in the state House of Delegates, claiming at least 51 of the chamber’s 100 seats. Democrats hold a narrow majority in the state Senate — given the overall tenor of the night, they were lucky that the upper chamber wasn’t up this cycle.

Needless to say, this is a horrible result for Democrats, and for the White House. Youngkin’s 2-point victory (based on the results as of Wednesday morning) represented an 11-point shift in the GOP’s favor from 4 years ago, when now-Gov. Ralph Northam (D) won by almost 9 points. Going back a bit further to 2013, McAuliffe won by 2.5 points that year — last night’s result was a near-mirror image of that. Map 1 compares McAuliffe’s showing 8 years ago to his result last night.

Map 1: Virginia gubernatorial races, 2013 vs 2021

An engaged GOP base delivered Republicans even bigger landslides than usual in rural central and western Virginia. In 2013, McAuliffe lost the 9th Congressional District, in the southwestern corner of the state, by about 30 percentage points. Last night, as almost every county in VA-9 saw double-digit redshifts, McAuliffe’s deficit there fell to about 50 points. Just north of VA-9, there was evidence that Youngkin energized Republicans in the Shenandoah Valley, a traditional GOP bastion.

As Map 1 shows, Youngkin’s gains were not just limited to whites in Appalachia. In Southside Virginia, some heavily Black counties saw their Democratic lean erode — Sussex County, which is majority-Black by composition, supported McAullife by 18 points in 2013 but came close to flipping.

While McAuliffe did make gains in many large suburban localities compared to 2013, his margins there were still relatively unimpressive, at least by Trump-era standards. Loudoun County, a large suburban county that the Youngkin campaign targeted, swung 6 percentage points to McAuliffe — however, compared to Northam’s 2017 showing, he still lost ground in almost every precinct.

Going into the election, the conventional wisdom seemed to be that lower turnout would benefit Youngkin. In 2014, Republicans nearly upset Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA) in a low turnout midterm. The higher the turnout, the more “presidential” (read pro-Democratic) it seemed the electorate would become. But high turnout did not prove a hindrance to Youngkin: There were at least 3.3 million votes cast, by far the biggest Virginia gubernatorial turnout ever (higher even than the high-turnout blowout Democratic victory 4 years ago).

More broadly, Youngkin was in the right place at the right time — he was the GOP nominee in a GOP-leaning environment. But he also seemed to outmaneuver McAuliffe on issues such as education and taxes.

While there were many factors that fell into place for Republicans, to us, it is hard to ignore old-fashioned “fundamentals.” Since August, Biden’s national standing has weakened. That decline, combined with the usual headwinds the president’s party faces in off-year elections, helped fuel Youngkin’s 12-point net improvement over Trump’s 10-point loss in Virginia last year. As we have noted before, this type of shift is not out of the ordinary for Virginia gubernatorial races. Gov. Phil Murphy’s (D-NJ) surprisingly close race in the lower-profile and still-uncalled New Jersey gubernatorial contest also indicates that the poor Democratic environment was a main driver of the party’s poor 2021 Election Night.

With that in mind, let’s look ahead:

Our Senate rating changes

Look, we know the midterm is still a year away. There are plenty of things that might change. Biden could find ways to improve his approval rating. Some of the problems that appear to be hurting Democrats right now — gas prices, inflation, supply-chain problems, DC infighting, COVID-19, and more — could subside over the next year. Other issues may become paramount: McAuliffe struggled to make abortion an issue in Virginia, but the Supreme Court gutting Roe vs. Wade next year would make abortion a much bigger deal next year, which could give Democrats a potent electoral issue. Trump may be a more important figure, taking some of the focus off of Biden and reminding some suburban voters why they soured on the GOP.

However, with all those caveats out of the way, it must be said: If Biden’s approval rating is in the low-to-mid 40s next year, as it is now, everything we know about political trends and history suggests that the Democrats’ tiny majorities in the House and Senate are at major risk of becoming minorities.

So it’s a good time to reevaluate our assessment of the Senate. Given the usual presidential party midterm drag, and the poor environment, our ratings are just too bullish on Democrats. So we are downgrading Sens. Mark Kelly (D-AZ), Raphael Warnock (D-GA), and Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV) from Leans Democratic to Toss-up. While we have not been particularly impressed with Republican candidate recruiting in these races — former NFL star and Trump favorite Herschel Walker seems like a particularly risky choice in Georgia, assuming he wins the nomination — these moves are almost entirely about the environment. Moreover, even if Republicans don’t end up running strong candidates in these races, all 3 states are markedly less blue than Virginia.

“Toss-up” doesn’t mean we think these Democratic senators will necessarily lose — it just means we don’t think the environment suggests they do not deserve to be considered even modest favorites anymore. We will dig into these races in more detail in future issues of the Crystal Ball, but we thought now was a good time to make these changes, given what Tuesday night’s results suggested about the broader political mood. Sen. Maggie Hassan (D-NH) retains a Leans Democratic designation in New Hampshire, but we will move her race to Toss-up when and if Gov. Chris Sununu (R-NH) launches his long-rumored challenge against her.

We are also moving Sen. Michael Bennet (D-CO) from Safe Democratic to Likely Democratic. He could potentially be vulnerable if 2022 turns into a GOP mega-wave.

Map 1 shows our full, updated Senate ratings.

Map 1: Crystal Ball Senate ratings

This leaves a Senate with 49 races either not on the ballot or at least leaning to the Republicans, 47 not on the ballot or at least leaning to the Democrats, and 4 Toss-ups: Democratic-held Arizona, Georgia, and Nevada, and Republican-held Pennsylvania. Splitting the Toss-ups would give the GOP a 51-49 edge. This reflects a close race for the Senate, but one that Republicans are better-positioned to win, particularly if the environment remains as poor for Democrats as it clearly is right now.


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38.) THE BLAZE

 


39.) THE FEDERALIST

 


40.) REUTERS

The Reuters Daily Briefing

Wednesday, November 3, 2021

by Linda Noakes and Katy Daigle

Sponsored by   Huawei

Hello

Here’s what you need to know.

Show me the money – COP26 looks at who will pay for climate pledges, Republicans jolt Biden with a win in Virginia, and scientists eye the beginning of the end for the pandemic

Today’s biggest stories

Activists dressed as world leaders take part in a media event during the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, Scotland, November 2, 2021. REUTERS/Russell Cheyne

COP26

After a two-day flurry of high-level speeches and announcements, world leaders departed the U.N. climate summit, leaving the nitty gritty of negotiations to country delegates in coming days.

Today, delegations will start focusing on the rules around climate finance – looking for ways to entice more private money to tasks including decarbonizing economies and adapting to climate impacts.

Rich nations’ failure to meet a 2020 target for providing $100 billion a year in climate financing to developing countries has earned wide rebuke. But U.S. climate envoy John Kerry suggested the goal could be met by 2022, instead of the revised goal of 2023.

Kerry will sit down for a breakfast chat with architect Norman Foster, to discuss how urban areas can build more smartly for a warmer world.

Throughout the day, expect more focus too on issues including how companies measure climate risk exposure, plan to tackle their emissions and report their sustainability credentials.

See our full coverage of COP26

Republican gubernatorial nominee Glenn Youngkin throws a basketball to the crowd as his wife Suzanne watches during his election night party at a hotel in Chantilly, Virginia, November 3, 2021. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst


U.S.

Republicans pushed Democrats out of the Virginia governorship and were running even in heavily Democratic New Jersey, signaling trouble for President Joe Biden’s party heading into next year’s congressional elections. We look at how Biden’s struggles, and education wars, propelled Glenn Youngkin’s Virginia victory.

Democrat Eric Adams won the New York City mayoral election, and Michelle Wu became the first woman and person of color elected as Boston mayor.

Minneapolis voters decided not to replace their police force with a new department that would have taken a holistic approach to crime, 18 months after the murder of George Floyd in the city sparked global protests for racial justice.

Senate Democrats will try to advance voting rights legislation in the face of overwhelming Republican opposition for a fourth time today, amid pressure to break the deadlock by altering a key Senate rule as early as this month.

The U.S. Supreme Court returns to the divisive issue of gun rights with arguments in a challenge to New York state’s limits on carrying concealed handguns in public – a case that could imperil certain firearms restrictions nationally.

WORLD

As the devastating Delta variant surge eases in many regions of the world, scientists are charting when, and where, COVID-19 will transition to an endemic disease in 2022 and beyond, according to Reuters interviews with over a dozen leading disease experts.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed pledged to bury his government’s enemies “with our blood” as he marked the start of the war in the Tigray region one year ago. All sides fighting in the war committed violations that may amount to war crimes, according to a joint investigation by the United Nations and Ethiopia.

Voter support for South Africa’s ruling African National Congress was on course to drop below 50% for the first time since it ended white minority rule in 1994, according to partial returns from local polls held nationwide.

Beijing shoppers stocked up on cabbage, rice and flour for the winter, after the government urged people to keep stores of basic goods in case of emergencies, though it assured them there were sufficient supplies after some panic buying.

Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards foiled an attempt by the United States to “steal” the Islamic Republic’s oil in the Sea of Oman, Iranian state TV reported, saying the incident took place recently.

BUSINESS

The Federal Reserve is expected to detail plans to end its pandemic-era bond purchases by mid-2022 as policymakers shift their focus towards what, if anything, to do about a surge in inflation that is lasting longer than anticipated. Here’s how the Fed’s taper works.

Ether, the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency, hit an all-time high, catching up with bitcoin’s rally and riding on news of wider blockchain adoption.

ByteDance founder Zhang Yiming has stepped down as chairman of the TikTok owner, after saying in May he would step down as CEO, a person with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters, in the latest shake up at the tech giant.

Higher prices and strong electric vehicle sales helped German automaker BMW beat analysts’ forecasts with a 42.4% year-on-year increase in third-quarter net profit to $2.99 billion.

Germany’s Lufthansa posted a return to operating profit in the third quarter for the first time since the coronavirus crisis, supported by the easing of travel restrictions and strong demand during the summer season.

Quote of the day

“The English are stubborn, they won’t let go … it is better to stay friendly and to find a compromise”

 

 

Cut off from British waters, French fishermen consider selling up

Video of the day

World’s oldest tennis player takes on Nadal

Twenty-time Grand Slam champion Rafael Nadal hit shots with 97-year-old Ukrainian Leonid Stanislavskyi, a Guinness World Record holder.

And finally…

Condors can reproduce without mating

A study by conservation scientists at the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance found that two condor chicks had hatched from unfertilized eggs.

Sponsored by: Huawei

Decoding the Sounds of Nature.

In the woods, not every conversation starts with a Tweet…

Learn more >

More from Reuters

COVID-19 The Great Reboot Disrupted COP26 Breakingviews

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41.) NOQ REPORT

 


42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE

 


43.) REDSTATE

 

RedState Morning Briefing
The Must-See Meltdown Begins After Glenn Youngkin’s Huge Win

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Progressives Get Handed Their Heads With Minneapolis Vote on ‘Defund the Police’

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Hold on to Your Hats in New Jersey: Here Comes the Real Upset

    READ STORY    
Update: The Southwest Airlines ‘Let’s Go, Brandon’ Pilot Story Takes a Wild Twist

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Larry Sabato Dejectedly Sums up Dem Failure in Virginia: ‘It’s a Bloodbath’

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‘Let’s Go, Brandon’ Is Causing the Press to Reveal Themselves in Shameful and Glorious Fashion

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LIVE Results: Virginia Governor

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Joe Biden Just Handed Republicans a 2022 Gift Complete With Shiny Red Bow

    READ STORY    
The VA GOP Sweep Proves Excellence and Issues Trump Status Quo and Race-Baiting

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44.) WORLD NET DAILY

Web version
Breaking News Alert
This is a breaking news alert which we send infrequently to update you on emerging breaking stories.
Pfizer falsified data in vaccine trial, whistleblower charges
Posted by Art Moore
Is being phony the rule of the day? A whistleblower says Pfizer took these extremely disturbing measures to deceive the powers that be amid COVID-vaccine trials. Read more…
Related

WATCH: Kamala smacked with sexually suggestive name in new chant
Posted by Bob Unruh
Move over ‘Let’s go, Brandon!’ Americans fed up with vaccine mandates have started this new chant for Kamala Harris that is sure to get the vice president’s attention. See the video. Read more…
Related

Harvard epidemiologist dismantles CDC immunity study
Posted by Art Moore
What a surprise. The government offers fatally flawed research to counter Israeli data on natural immunity. Read more…
Related

Web version
Tucker Carlson documentary: Feds incited Jan. 6, entrapped citizens
‘No decent person wants to believe it’s true, but increasingly there’s evidence it is’ Read more…
Washington Post probing group that exposed Fauci dog experiments
Reporter told activists their revelations risked harm to COVID response Read more…
Supremes hear abortion cases: 1 justice blatantly tips her hand
Will Trump’s trio on SCOTUS do the right thing on abortion? Read more…
Harvard epidemiologist dismantles CDC immunity study
What a surprise. The government offers fatally flawed research to counter Israeli data on natural immunity. Read more…
‘The Great Resignation’ is underway thanks to Biden
37% of truckers could walk away due to mandates … you think supply chain issues are bad NOW … Read more…
The Pilgrims learned of socialism’s worthlessness: Why can’t we?
There’s a great documentary just coming out in time for the 400th anniversary of Thanksgiving. Read more…
If you say the 3 magic words, the FBI might brand you a domestic terrorist
The ex-FBI agent who made these comments now works for CNN.
Read more…
Man runs after kitten being swept away by flood after record-breaking rain
‘There’s a cat!’ the woman said. ‘It’s drowning!’ Read more…
Man loses wallet but finds 3 new friends when Good Samaritans return it
‘I can’t wait to see what the future holds,’ the owner of the wallet said. Read more…
NBC News contacts Secret Service about ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ chant
The chant has swept America, with many accepting it in place of its vulgar original form. Read more…
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45.) MSNBC


46.) BIZPAC REVIEW

 

    
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Defeated Omar humiliated after Minneapolis voters reject measure to abolish police

BPR EXCLUSIVE: Youngkin holds strong lead over McAuliffe in early exit polling

‘We’ve sent a message to the entire nation’: New Jersey’s red leap shocks all

Exclusive exit poll data shows why Youngkin won and what the Dems are in for now

Winsome Sears makes first mark as Virginia’s black bada** female lieutenant governor

MSNBC roasted for 7 stages of grief in election night meltdown

Senate Republicans will formally nullify Biden’s vaccine mandate – report

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Biden says he doesn’t think anyone would trade this Thanksgiving for last year’s, even ‘as bad as things are’

‘It’s a Bloodbath’: MSNBC shares misery with Dems

BPR’s top political cartoons of the day: Hey, losers …

Both parties set to win House seats in Ohio’s twin special elections

Governor calls on the Texas Association of School Boards to remove ‘pornographic images and substance’ from schools

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Over 100 groups demand Biden admin evacuate tens of thousands of Afghan allies

Michelle Malkin: America’s nutty professor of anti-white rage

‘Spare me!’ Vulgar anti-Trump stunts come back to bite amid colossal meltdown over ‘Let’s go, Brandon!’

‘No, no, no. … They’re lynching people’: Whoopi doesn’t like what NBC sportscaster has to say on CRT

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47.) ABC

November 3, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
CDC advisory committee votes to recommend Pfizer vaccine for children ages 5-11: A committee of independent experts advising the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention voted unanimously on Tuesday to recommend the Pfizer vaccine for children 5-11, checking off one of the last boxes in the authorization process. The most recent data from Pfizer’s clinical trials found that the vaccine for children ages 5-11 was nearly 91% effective against symptomatic illness. Pfizer also said none of the children in the clinical trials experienced myocarditis, which has been associated with the mRNA vaccines in very rare cases. With CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky endorsing the recommendation for Pfizer’s vaccine, the first shots can be administered as early as today. But vaccinations are not expected to kick into high gear until Nov. 8, when the White House says Pfizer’s pediatric vaccines will be more widely accessible across the nation. You can learn more about kids and the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine here and here.
Republican Glenn Youngkin projected to win Virginia governor’s race: Republican Glenn Youngkin, a former private equity executive running his first campaign for political office, will be the next governor of Virginia, ABC News has projected. Around 10 p.m., Democrat Terry McAuliffe spoke at his election night event, but did not concede defeat. “We still got a lot of votes to count,” McAuliffe said. “We’re gonna continue to count the votes because every single Virginian deserves to have their vote counted.” Youngkin’s projected win over McAuliffe, a longtime fixture in Democratic politics and a former governor of the commonwealth, marks the first time a Republican has won the gubernatorial election since 2009 and the end to Democrats’ trifecta government control in Richmond. It’s also a warning shot to Democrats one year out from the 2022 midterm elections. The race, nationalized by the candidates themselves, was viewed by most as a referendum on President Joe Biden and a bellwether for next year’s contests, when Democrats have to defend their slim majorities in the House and Senate with history already against them. Other notable election night news includes Democrat Eric Adams projected to win New York City mayoral race, becoming the city’s second Black mayor, and Minneapolis voters rejecting a charter amendment to replace the Minneapolis Police Department with a Department of Public Safety. Watch “Good Morning America” for the latest election results.
LAPD releases new theory about mysterious LAX ‘jet pack man’: Following nearly two years of reported sightings of a man flying at relatively high altitudes around aircrafts landing at Los Angeles International Airport, the police department released a new theory — there may not have been a man after all, but rather balloons. The first reported sighting of a possible jetpack flier was made on Aug. 30, 2020, after two different commercial airline pilots reported seeing a man in a jet pack hovering near LAX, ABC News reported. A second report was made on Oct. 14, 2020, and the third was made on July 28, 2021, all in the same surrounding area as the first. Then, last November, a helicopter crew captured images of a life-sized balloon resembling Jack Skellington, the fictional character from Tim Burton’s 1993 movie “A Nightmare Before Christmas.” Federal authorities said that none of the theories surrounding the sightings have been confirmed and they’re continuing to investigate the situation with the Federal Aviation Administration.
Day care owner adopts child from class in special Halloween-themed ceremony: A group of 15 children in Florida celebrated their first Halloween Sunday with their forever families after being adopted in a special Halloween-themed adoption ceremony. One of the children adopted was Shyla Sheppard, who turned 8 on Oct. 29, 2021, the day the adoption ceremony took place inside the Duval County Courthouse in Jacksonville, Florida. Shyla, a second-grader, dressed up in costume as a bailiff and banged the gavel at the end of each adoption, according to her mom, Angie Sheppard, who first met Shyla two years ago when she was attending her day care center after entering the foster care system. Sheppard said one day after day care, Shyla asked her to be her mom. When Shyla was up for adoption two years later, Sheppard followed up. “To know that she’s in a forever home now, I’m so happy and satisfied,” Sheppard said. For those considering adopting or fostering a child, Sheppard said, “Don’t be afraid. Take the leap.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky joins us to share what’s next for American families now that the Pfizer vaccine is recommended for children ages 5-11. Plus, ABC News meteorologists Ginger Zee and Rob Marciano take a look at the threat of rising sea levels in New York City by learning how it’s preparing for the worst. And climate change coverage continues as Ginger heads to the Maldives, where the paradise faces its own threatening sea levels. And don’t miss Jamie Oliver cooking up some delicious eats. All this and more only on “GMA.”
Gun violence killed her daughter. How Chicago mom is rallying other ‘warrior moms’ for change
Nyisha Beemon is keeping her daughter’s memory alive by working to combat gun violence in her community.
Put some good in your morning
PHOTO: Deals and Steals With Free Shipping ‘GMA’ Deals & Steals with free shipping
PHOTO: BIG LOViE Today from Tory Johnson’s 40 Boxes: Blankets, travel bags and more
PHOTO: Dylan Meyer and Kristen Stewart, Sept. 11, 2021, in New York. Kristen Stewart announces engagement, talks ‘chill’ wedding plans
VIDEO: 58-year-old Mom takes over TikTok with her hair tips and tricks 58-year-old Mom takes over TikTok with her hair tips and tricks
Read more →
‘Still Life’ by Sarah Winman is the ‘GMA’ November Book Club pick: Read an excerpt
Winman’s new novel is a beautiful and big-hearted story of people brought together by love, war and art.

48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN


49.) NBC FIRST READ

Image

From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar

FIRST READ: Democrats get caught in backlash of negative national environment

So just how blue was Virginia? Not blue enough to stop the GOP from winning the races for governor, lieutenant governor and leading right now for attorney general.

 

How blue was New Jersey? Maybe just blue enough, where Dem incumbent Gov. Phil Murphy barely leads by about 1,000 votes at publication time (and where the outstanding vote looks good for him).

 

Add it all up, and what we got was double-digit movement away from Democrats and towards the Republican Party – all just nine months into the Biden presidency.

 

Virginia

2017 VA-GOV: D+9

2020 PRES: D+10

2021 VA-GOV (so far): R+2

 

New Jersey

2017 NJ-GOV: D+14

2020 PRES: D+16

2021 NJ-GOV (so far): Tied – but where you’d rather be Murphy with the outstanding vote

 

Regarding Virginia, Democrats can point the finger at strategy, tactics or ideology, but the COMBINED movement last night tells a simple story: The political environment was everything.

Leah Millis/Reuters

Last weekend’s NBC News national poll showed Biden’s job rating at 42 percent, as well as 71 percent of Americans saying country is on the wrong track.

 

Last night’s exit poll in Virginia had Biden’s job rating in the state at 45 percent – when he got 54 percent of the vote a year ago.

It’s an inverse of what we saw play out in Donald Trump’s first year as president in 2017, when the movement was in the Democrats’ direction.

 

And it’s an ominous sign for Democrats heading into next year’s midterm elections, where the playing field isn’t Virginia or New Jersey – but instead Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

 

Our question this morning: How does Biden respond to this movement in Virginia and New Jersey, especially after a rough August, a rough September and a rough October for his presidency?

 

Asked in Scotland yesterday if a loss in Virginia would be a rebuke to his presidency, Biden responded first: “We’re going to win.” And then he added: “I don’t believe — and I’ve not seen any evidence that whether or not I am doing well or poorly, whether or not I’ve got my agenda passed or not is going to have any real impact on winning or losing.”

 

Well, Democrats didn’t win in Virginia. His approval rating in the state was just 45 percent.

 

And Democrats are holding their breath in New Jersey.

Youngkin supercharged his base; McAuliffe didn’t

In Virginia, two trends caught our eye last night: Republican Glenn Youngkin excelled in rural parts of the state, while Democrat Terry McAuliffe failed to turn out voters in some areas with high portions of Black residents.

 

Youngkin blew the doors off of McAuliffe in many rural, deep-red counties, and he ended up getting close to former President Donald Trump’s performance in 2016, a race that saw far higher turnout.

 

The Republican gubernatorial nominee banked more than 17,300 voters in Washington County (Trump won 19,320 votes there in 2016); he won more than 11,600 votes in Louisa County (Trump won 10,528 votes there in 2016); and he won 12,500 in Gloucester County (Trump won 13,096 votes there in 2016).

 

That’s presidential-level turnout, or close to it, in many of those rural counties.

 

And then there are majority-Black areas— like Greenville County, or the cities of Hampton and Portsmouth — where McAuliffe couldn’t expand the margins he needed.

 

McAuliffe won Greensville County with 53 percent of the vote. But President Biden won 57 percent of that vote in 2020, the same margin as future-Gov. Ralph Northam did in 2017.

 

In Portsmouth, McAuliffe got 65 percent of the vote – lower than Biden’s 69 percent and Northam’s 70 percent.

 

And in Hampton, McAullife’s 66 percent compares to Biden’s 70 percent and Northam’s 72 percent.

 

The bottom line: Youngkin was able to supercharge his base, and give him credit for being able to do so.

 

McAuliffe wasn’t.

 

By the way, look at the composition of the Virginia electorate last night compared with 2017, per the exit poll:

  • White voters: 74% (was 67% in 2017)
  • Black voters: 16% (was 20% in 2017)
  • 18-29 voters: 10% (was 14% in 2017)

 

Tweet of the Day: Looks like the GOP flipped Virginia’s House of Delegates, too

Progressives didn’t have a good night in Buffalo and Minneapolis

Outside of Virginia and New Jersey, one other storyline emerged from yesterday’s results: Progressives didn’t have a good night, especially in Buffalo and Minneapolis.

 

In Buffalo’s mayoral race, Democratic Socialists of America-backed India Walton – who surprisingly won the Dem nomination – lost to incumbent Mayor Byron Brown, who waged a write-in campaign to victory.

 

In Minneapolis, a ballot measure to overhaul the city’s policing was easily defeated.

 

Maybe the best news for progressives was Michelle Wu’s mayoral victory in Boston.

Data Download: The numbers you need to know today

8: The number of counties (or cities that report their results separately) in Virginia that Democrats won in 2017, but that Youngkin is leading in now.

 

3: The number of ballot proposals in New York state changing the state’s election laws that are poised to be defeated despite an endorsement from the state Democratic Party.

 

46,176,844: The number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 67,466 more since yesterday morning.)

 

751,830: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,289 more since yesterday morning.)

 

423,942,794: The number of total vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 937,410 more since yesterday morning.)

 

19,783,921: The number of booster vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 605,183 more since yesterday morning.)

 

58.1 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.

 

69.7 percent: The share of all Americans 18-years and older who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.

Shameless Plug: Tickets on sale now for the Meet the Press Film Festival at AFI Fest

It’s almost time for the fifth annual Meet the Press Film Festival at AFI Fest!

 

This year’s festival features five programs of the best-in-class short documentaries — ticketholders can watch the films virtually or in-person on November 11th in Los Angeles.

 

You can get your tickets now at Fest.AFI.com

ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?

It was a big night for key candidates of color across the country, including Boston’s Michelle WuVirginia’s Winsome SearsCincinnati’s Aftab Pureval and Cleveland’s Justin Bibb.

 

Minneapolis residents rejected a proposal to replace police department with a Department of Public Safety.

 

Opponents of the Southlake, Texas diversity plan won a majority of the school board there Tuesday.

 

The CDC Director formally endorsed offering Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine to children between the ages of 5 and 11.

 

It looks like Florida’s special Democratic congressional primary is going to a recount.

 

Democrats appear to have reached an agreement on lowering prescription drug costs, but other big disagreements still remain.

 

Thanks for reading.

If you’re a fan, please forward this to a friend. They can sign up here.

 

We love hearing from our readers, so shoot us a line here with your comments and suggestions.

 

Thanks,

Chuck, Mark and Ben

Download the NBC News Mobile App

Image
Image

50.) CBS

 


51.) REASON

In Gangbuster Night for Republicans, Glenn Youngkin Wins Virginia Governor’s Race

Plus: The Twin cities both say yes to rent control, Eric Adams will be the next mayor of New York City, and more…

Tuesday was a very good night for the Republicans, who won one governor’s mansion in a blue state and might still pick up another. The GOP’s clearest win of the night came in Virginia, where Glenn Youngkin beat out Democrat and former governor Terry McAuliffe in a nail-biter of a race.
Youngkin managed to capture just over 50 percent of the vote in a state that hasn’t elected a Republican governor since 2009 and which went for Joe Biden in 2020 by 10 points. Republican former state legislator and Marine Corps veteran Winsome Sears also won her race for the open lieutenant governor’s seat, becoming the first woman and the first black woman to win that office. Republican Jason Miyares also managed to defeat sitting Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring.
Meanwhile, the governor’s race in deep-blue New Jersey—where Democrat Gov. Phil Murphy is running for reelection against Republican former state Assemblyman Jack Ciattarelli—remains too close to call. This is despite predictions that Murphy would win easily.
The Virginia results are even more startling when one looks at the partisan swing in individual counties.

Virginia county-level data from the state so far has counties that voted for Trump last year shifting 14 points to the right in the aggregate — and counties that voted for Biden shifting 18 points to the right.

— Philip Bump (@pbump) November 3, 2021

Trump won Fauquier County by 17. Youngkin currently leading it by 42 with 55% of the vote in. pic.twitter.com/JESDSDwBfh

— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) November 2, 2021

Republicans’ victory comes after a contentious campaign where battles over education, and particularly whether to open schools and how much control parents should have over schools’ curriculum, featured prominently.

Okay, let’s say someone actually believes this. VA Dems could’ve just not closed schools and forced poor kids to get no education for a year. Or they could wave the magical anti-racism wand, and make all the racism go away. Simple, right? https://t.co/foFdASI2uD

— Zaid Jilani (@ZaidJilani) November 3, 2021

Youngkin, a businessman and political neophyte, campaigned on opening Virginia’s schools and giving parents more say over the kinds of books and materials their children were assigned. He also supported a ban on state-sponsored “critical race theory” curriculum.
McAuliffe, in contrast, ran on the riskier message of telling parents to butt out of their children’s education. In a fatal debate gaffe in September, the Democratic candidate said bluntly “I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.”
When that message strangely flopped, McAuliffe spent much of the campaign embarrassingly trying to clarify his statement while doing everything he could to tar Youngkin as a racist acolyte of Donald Trump.
He called Youngkin’s messaging on schools a “racist dog whistle” and even went so far as to claim that Trump was holding a rally with him in the state, when in fact he wasn’t. The pro-McAuliffe, anti-Trump, anti-Republican Lincoln Project went even further, sending actors dressed up as tiki-torch wielding white nationalists to stand in front of a Youngkin campaign bus.
None of those attacks seemed to stick, in part because Youngkin did his best to avoid Trump and some of his signature issues during the campaign. The Washington Times reports that the governor-elect ran zero ads about illegal immigration. (That compares to 2017 when Republican gubernatorial candidate Ed Gillespie tried to tar then-candidate Ralph Northam as an MS-13 supporter.)

Youngkin ditched the nativist and anti-Hispanic talking points favored by nativists. The GOP is moving beyond its nativist temper-tantrum.

Good riddance. https://t.co/4GQJWhDMdnpic.twitter.com/W4ndvm63hY

— The Alex Nowrasteh (@AlexNowrasteh) November 3, 2021

Reason‘s Matt Welch notes that those attacks on Youngkin as a not-so-closeted white nationalist also carried the electorally unhelpful implication that parents’ own concerns about their children’s education were also fundamentally racist.
“If you tell parents that attempting to exert influence on their kids’ school policies is just some kind of ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ wink-nudge for hating on the dark-skinned, those parents will rightly tell you to go fuck yourself. Such choices do not successful political strategies make,” writes Welch.
Youngkin’s win has pundits predictably prognosticating on whether it’s a model for a successful post-Trump Republican party.

You can bet every Republican in the country is going to run on education in 2022 because of what happened in Virginia tonight. (Even if in reality education was just part of the picture and “education” is an umbrella for a hundred different sub-issues.) pic.twitter.com/S11lYm0AXW

— Kristen Soltis Anderson (@KSoltisAnderson) November 3, 2021

Journalist Zaid Jilani argues Youngkin was successful because he merged a broadly popular conservative message on education with more populist policies like raising teacher salaries and eliminating grocery taxes.
National Review writer Michael Brendan Dougherty framed Republican successes last night as a victory over Democratic excesses on both the culture war and COVID-19.

The take: 1) Republican culture war politics work way better when they are a defense of “normal people versus ideologues,” they don’t work as “Let’s make America more Evangelical.” 2) Covid connects the economy and education painpoints. Dems need to find a way out.

— Michael Brendan Dougherty (@michaelbd) November 3, 2021

The real reason for Youngkin’s victory, of course, is that McAuliffe failed to endorse state-level repeals of zoning restrictions.

I guess I should do a Pundit’s Fallacy tweet and say T-Mac would’ve won if he’d run on a statewide zoning preemption plan.

— Matthew Yglesias (@mattyglesias) November 3, 2021

FREE MARKETS

An election night that was broadly good for conservatives also saw voters endorse some radical, left-wing solutions to high housing costs. Minnesotan voters in both Minneapolis and St. Paul approved rent control ballot initiatives.
The Minneapolis initiative, as mentioned in yesterday’s Roundup, is the more modest of the two. It amends the city’s charter to allow the Minneapolis city council to pass their own, as-of-yet unwritten rent control ordinance or to refer a rent control policy to voters in a subsequent referendum.
Over in St. Paul, voters approved something much more far-reaching. The ballot initiative there places a 3 percent cap on rent increases citywide. The St. Paul initiative, which was written by a coalition of left-wing activist groups, also does not include typical exemptions from rental price caps for new construction and newly vacant apartments.
There’s been a recent effort to rebrand and retool rent control as an “anti-rent gouging” or “rent stabilization” policy that can prevent unfair rent hikes while not suppressing the construction of new housing. In places like Oregon and California, state legislators say they’ve managed to achieve this balance with rent control laws that respectively limit rent increases to 7 and 5 percent plus inflation, exempt new construction for 15 years, and generally allow landlords to raise rents as high they want on vacant apartments.
St. Paul’s initiative makes none of those allowances and will likely prove disastrous for rental housing supply as a result. Minneapolis, meanwhile, risks undoing all the good work they’ve done trying to increase housing supply by repealing burdensome zoning regulations.

ELECTION 2021

• Minneapolis voters also roundly rejected a ballot initiative that would have eliminated the city’s police department in favor of a Department of Public Safety.
• Former New York City police officer and state senator Eric Adams, a Democrat, easily won the city’s mayoral election against Republican gadfly and Guardian Angel founder Curtis Sliwa.
• New York voters also rejected statewide referenda that would have allowed the legislature to pass bills permitting same-day voter registration and no-excuse absentee ballots.
• Byron Brown, incumbent mayor of Buffalo, New York, appears to have won as a write-in candidate against socialist Democratic primary winner India Walton.

With 88% of the vote in, write in votes are well surpassing @Indiawaltonbflo tally in the closely watched Buffalo mayor’s race.@MayorByronBrown is running a write-in campaign after losing the primary, and this is a positive sign for him pic.twitter.com/BQl0hOb5MP

— Joseph Spector (@GannettAlbany) November 3, 2021

• City councilor Michelle Wu was elected the next mayor of Boston.
• Dark horse candidate (and Republican) Edward Durr might have unseated New Jersey Senate President Steve Sweeney.

This is the political Cinderella story of the year. A conservative truck driver may just take down the 2nd most powerful Democrat in NJ. He spent $153 bucks. And he’s a hell of a nice guy to boot. https://t.co/OkpPpHuEs8

— Rich Zeoli 🇺🇸 (@Richzeoli) November 3, 2021

Most Popular Stories from Reason.com

 

The Supreme Court Declines To Determine if You Have a First Amendment Right To Film the Police
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Virginia Governor Race Is an Education Policy Wake-Up Call That Democrats (and the Media) Won’t Heed
If Glenn Youngkin Has to Answer for Trump, Terry McAuliffe Really Has to Answer for Randi Weingarten
Christian Britschgi is an associate editor at Reason. After graduating from Portland State University with a degree in political science, Christian worked in public relations before moving into journalism by way of an internship at Reason’s D.C. office.

He has since written for a number of news outlets, including The College Fix, The Lens, Watchdog.org, The Orange County Register, The New York Daily News, and Jacobite.  You can follow him on Twitter @christianbrits.

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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE

11/03/2021

Carl Cannon’s Morning Note

Election Analysis; Financial Literacy; Bravo, Braves! 
By Carl M. Cannon on Nov 03, 2021 09:22 am
Good morning, it’s Wednesday, Nov. 3, 2021.The postmortems have begun — I wrote one myself — about an Election Day so fascinating it nearly blotted out the World Series. For those of you who missed it (I was one of them), the Atlanta Braves closed out the 2021 Series last night with power hitting, sterling fielding, and a clutch performance by a stylish young left-handed starting pitcher.Are there lessons for politicians here? Perhaps. Bowing to woke partisan politics, Major League Baseball pulled this year’s All-Star Game out of Atlanta. Remember that? All that stunt did was hurt working-class Georgians and small local businesses dependent on stadium revenue — and obscured the planned celebration of Henry Aaron’s career. It made the MLB suits in their suites look bad, but instead of whining or going in the tank, the Braves made the best of it.

When their best all-around player went down for the season with an injury, they traded for three outfielders to take his place. The team then won the division, swept through the National League playoffs — and got to honor Hammerin’ Hank’s legacy and his family in Atlanta at the World Series.

The Braves won only 88 games in the regular season, significantly fewer than any of the teams they defeated in the playoffs. But the team’s moves paid off: The Braves got stronger as the season went along. The Series’ Most Valuable Player award went to Jorge Soler, a strapping slugger who was one of the midseason acquisitions. Likewise, Eddie Rosario, the MVP of the Braves win over the L.A. Dodgers in the NLCS, came aboard in mid-summer.

That’s how the economics of modern baseball play out, and the Braves finessed it smartly. Instead of kvetching about, say, the “tomahawk chop” (and, yes, that’s a metaphor), Democrats might do better to emulate the Atlanta Braves, and make some midcourse corrections of their own.

As for Dusty Baker, the well-traveled 72-year-old Houston Astros skipper who failed again to get a championship ring as a manager, he can hold his head high. Dusty manages the way he played, which is to say with class and competitive fire — and I, for one, hope he gets one more chance.

On that note, I’d direct you to RCP’s front page, which contains the latest poll averages, political news and video, aggregated opinion pieces ranging across the ideological spectrum — and much debate coverage. We also have a complement of original material from RCP’s reporters and contributors:

* * *

Seven Reasons Democrats Lost Virginia. My analysis is here.

At Youngkin HQ, a Hat Tip to Harnessed Parent Anger. Susan Crabtree has the story.

At McAuliffe HQ, a Trumpless Reality Sinks In. Phil Wegmann reports on the scene last night in McLean.

Why We Must Protect Key Institutions From Partisanship. Andrew E. Busch writes that for a healthy democracy to function, the administration of justice and elections must not be politicized.

Make Financial Literacy a National Priority. At RealClearPolicy, Zane Heflin and Julia Baumel explain why Republicans and Democrats should be able to agree on addressing this urgent need.

Democrats’ Proposed SALT Change. At RealClearMarkets, Andrew Wilford argues that eliminating the state and local tax deduction cap works counter to Democrats’ goal of addressing wealth inequality.

Eco-Imperialism Threatens the World’s Poor. At RealClearEnergy, Craig Rucker asserts that climate policies pushed at the Glasgow conference will exacerbate human poverty and misery in developing nations.

A History Lesson for Advocates of Psychedelics. RealClearScience editor Ross Pomeroy responds to the decriminalization of psilocybin in Oregon and a dozen U.S. cities.

Perfecting Humanity by Destroying It. At RealClearBooks, Aaron Rhodes reviews Juliana Garan Pilon’s “The Utopian Conceit and the War on Freedom.”

Is Patriotism Worth Preserving? At RealClear’s American Civics portal, Steven B. Smith explains why citizens in a divided nation should have a strong attachment to America.

* * *

Carl M. Cannon
Washington Bureau chief, RealClearPolitics
@CarlCannon (Twitter)
ccannon@realclearpolitics.com

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11/03/2021

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57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY

While the U.S. Department of Energy is prioritizing climate change and new “carbon neutral” energy, security experts are raising the alarm.
Armed drone swarms coordinated and guided by artificial intelligence (AI) could give Taiwan the needed punch to overwhelm the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) on the island’s beaches in the event of an invasion.
Two polls show few Americans believe the January 6 riot was a “coup” or “insurrection.” And the numbers are declining.
If every American voter had been given the opportunity that those in Virginia had yesterday, it seems likely the message sent nationwide would be as stark as it was in the state that did so much to inspire and lead our founding revolution.
Listen to Frank Gaffney’s Secure Freedom Radio here.
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST

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Good morning. It’s Wednesday, Nov. 3, and we’re covering changes in Virginia, baseball’s new champion, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
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NEED TO KNOW

Youngkin Wins in Virginia

Voters in states across the country cast ballots yesterday, choosing state and local leaders and making decisions on a number of referendums.

 

In the most closely watched race, Republican Glenn Youngkin defeated Democrat Terry McAuliffe, 50.7% to 48.6%. The former businessman began the campaign as a heavy underdog, but closed the gap in the race’s final months to score an upset victory in a state President Joe Biden won by 10 points in 2020.

 

Republicans also appear on track to retake the state’s House of Delegates, securing a one-seat majority. Winsome Sears (R) is projected to win lieutenant governor, becoming the first Black woman to hold statewide office in Virginia history.

 

In New Jersey, incumbent Gov. Phil Murphy (D) and challenger Jack Ciattarelli (R) remain in a virtual deadlock, with Ciattarelli leading by about 1,000 votes with 88% of the ballots counted. Biden won the state by 15 points in 2020.

 

Minneapolis voters rejected a referendum to abolish the police force and create a Department of Public Safety, 56% to 44%. Mayor Jacob Frey (D), who has faced intense criticism over violent crime and opposed the measure, led the first round of ranked choice voting but did not reach a majority. Votes will continue to be tabulated today.

 

Finally, former police captain Eric Adams (D) will become New York City’s next mayor, defeating challenger Curtis Sliwa (R) 67% to 29%. Adams beat a number of progressive challengers in the primary race, running on a tough-on-crime platform.

Champions in Atlanta

The Atlanta Braves won the World Series last night, blanking the Houston Astros 7-0 to win the championship in six games. It’s the fourth title in franchise history and their first since 1995.

 

The win represents a dramatic turnaround for the team, who finished the regular season 88-73 and had a losing record entering the month of August. Designated hitter Jorge Soler was named World Series MVP, with an effort including a three-run homer in the third inning that jump-started Atlanta’s offense last night. Soler began the season in Kansas City, with Atlanta trading for him July 30. Starting pitcher Max Fried struck out six batters in six scoreless innings.

 

See photos from the celebration here.

Tesla Back-and-Forth

Rental car company Hertz countered Tesla CEO Elon Musk yesterday, saying Tesla deliveries into its fleet are already occurring, despite a Monday tweet from Musk claiming no contract had been signed.

 

The back-and-forth created confusion for investors. Musk’s comment followed an announcement by Hertz last week that the company was ordering 100,000 Teslas by the end of 2022—the largest rental car order ever for electric vehicles. With the sale valued at $4B, the news boosted shares of both companies, with Tesla surpassing a $1T valuation for the first time. Tesla stock dropped 3% yesterday, while Hertz—four months out of bankruptcy—dropped sharply but ultimately rose 2.7% to a 52-week high.

 

Separately, Tesla recalled nearly 12,000 vehicles over a software error that may cause a false forward-collision warning or activate the automatic emergency braking system.

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> Scientists create a synthetic version of the plant compound celastrol; the natural version has been shown to halt and reverse obesity in mice, but has harmful side effects (More)

Business & Markets

> US stock markets rise to fresh all-time highs (S&P 500 +0.4%, Dow +0.4%, Nasdaq +0.3%); Dow crosses 36,000 ahead of tomorrow’s Federal Reserve meeting (More) | Shares of Zillow fall 10% after company announces it will exit its home-flipping business (More)

 

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> Department of Justice files antitrust lawsuit to potentially block America’s largest book publisher Penguin Random House’s $2B acquisition of Simon & Schuster (More)

Politics & World Affairs

> CDC gives final approval to Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for use in children aged 5 to 11; shots expected to become available within days (More) | See current US stats (More)

 

> Democrats strike narrowed deal aiming to lower prescription drug prices, to be included in potential $1.75T social spending bill; proposal allows Medicare to negotiate drug prices in limited instances (More)

 

> Satellite images show Russian military buildup near the eastern border of Ukraine; Russia denies reports (More) | See background on the conflict (More)

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Florida is seeing a sea turtle boom.

 

Ranking Europe’s best ski resorts.

 

SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule has a toilet problem.

 

Inside Japan’s underwater observatory.

 

Clickbait: About those jetpackers in the Los Angeles skies.

 

Historybook: RIP American sharpshooter Annie Oakley (1926); HBD journalist and fashion icon Dame Anna Wintour (1949); The Soviet Union launches first animal into space (1957); US arms sale to Iran revealed (1986); One World Trade Center officially opens on former site of Twin Towers (2014).

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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH

 


64.) NATIONAL REVIEW

TODAY’S MORNING JOLT WITH JIM GERAGHTY
IS PRESENTED BY

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WITH JIM GERAGHTYNovember 03 2021
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A ‘Five-Alarm Fire’ for Democrats

 

On the menu today: Savor this, conservatives. Election Day 2021 went about as well as it possibly could go for Virginia Republicans, who swept Virginia’s statewide races and won back control of the general assembly; the New Jersey’s governor’s race is still too close to call; Minneapolis rejects abolishing the police; and an Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez-endorsed socialist mayoral candidate in Buffalo loses to a write-in bid.

Welcome to the Backlash, Democrats!

And how are you this morning? Here in Virginia, the sun is shining a little brighter, the birds are chirping sweetly, the leaves are turning vibrant colors, and Republicans just stomped the bejeebers out of Democrats up and down the ballot. A “bloodbath,” as University of Virginia professor Larry Sabato told Rachel Maddow last night. “A five-alarm fire,” as Van Jones declared on CNN.

Glenn Youngkin won the Virginia …   READ MORE

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Fortunately, many people intuitively find free enterprise to be more logical and desirable than its unpleasant alternatives. But defeating a belief in the centralized planning of our economic affairs will take more than a free enterprise intuition; it will take a free enterprise understanding!

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TRENDING ON NATIONAL REVIEW

1. Kill the Bill

2. Glenn Youngkin’s Big Win

3. Can Dems Cut Off the COVID Anchor?

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PHILIP KLEIN

5 Takeaways from the Virginia Race

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Youngkin, Republicans Projected to SWEEP Virginia

Youngkin, Republicans Projected to SWEEP Virginia

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GOP Slightly Ahead in Deep-Blue NJ’s Gubernatorial Race

‘Squad’ Member Accuses Fellow Dem. Joe Manchin of Racism


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78.) NATURAL NEWS

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Medical horror – Vaccine spike protein enters cell nuclei, suppresses DNA repair engine for the body
Mike Adams This finding can only be described as a true “horror” in its implications. Stunning new research published in Viruses, part of the SARS-CoV-2 Host Cell Interactions edition of MDPI (Open Access Journals) reveals that vaccine spike proteins enter cell nuclei and wreak havoc on cells’ DNA repair mechanism, suppressing DNA repair by as much as 90 percent.

The horrifying upshot of this finding is that people who have taken mRNA vaccines will experience suppressed DNA repair, escalating exposures that were once thought to be minor issues to significant threats to their health.

In other words, people exposed to 5G radiation, mammogramy exams, plasticizer chemicals in food products, and carcinogens in personal care products (laundry detergents, perfumes, shampoos, skin lotions, etc.) will be unable to repair the DNA damage caused by those exposures. Following relatively small exposures, they will begin to mutate and develop cancers throughout their bodies.

Get the shocking, horrifying details in today’s feature article and podcast here.

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Situation Update, Nov 2, 2021 – Monsters, Zombies and Mutants: Horrifying new research reveals how vaccines suppress DNA repair mechanism in your cellsWatch this video
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“Height of insanity”: Biden is ripped to shreds after word leaks that his administration wants to pay illegal aliens 450k for breaking into the USABy JD Heyes | Read the full story
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More of Today’s ArticlesAnalyst says systematic flaws prevent VAERS from accurately tracking adverse reactions to vaccines
Analyst and computational biologist Jessica Rose believes there are systematic flaws that prevent the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) system from working as intended. Rose …Beagle Freedom Project calls out Dr. Anthony Fauci, demands end to “criminal” torture of beagles
A non-profit animal rights organization is calling out Dr. Anthony Fauci for supporting and funding animal torture. The Beagle Freedom Project is demanding an end to the “criminal” torture of …World’s largest biometric digital ID program “Aadhaar” tracks medications, vaccines, purchases, and all movement of 1.3 billion people in India
Ever heard of Aadhaar, the massive people-tracking government ‘portal’ in India that tracks everything you buy, everywhere you go, and every medication that’s in your body? …Doctor makes shocking admission about safety of coronavirus vaccines for young children
The Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee (VRBPAC) on Tuesday, Oct. 26, approved the emergency use of Pfizer’s Wuhan …UK’s Online Safety Bill looks to prosecute people for thought crimes, threatens to jail people who speak about vaccine injury
The United Kingdom (UK) is preparing to establish a legal framework that would surveil online communications and punish people for thought crimes. Under the new rules, social media companies …Harvard professor urges parents not to give children coronavirus vaccines because “risks outweigh any benefit”
A Harvard professor urged parents not to give their children the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine. Many public health officials around the world say that it is important to vaccinate the …Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey signs executive order directing all state agencies to ignore Biden’s vaccine mandates
Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey on Monday, Oct. 25, signed an executive order meant to help with legal challenges to President Joe Biden’s vaccine mandates. Ivey stressed that the new federal vaccine …Over 100,000 workers are currently on strike and could collapse the economy, but Biden is doing nothing to reactivate productive members of society
More than 100,000 American workers are currently on strike – a culmination of nearly two years of labor unrest that started when the government forcibly shut down entire industries in early …

Scott Kesterson says reports of pilots dying midflight due to COVID-19 vaccines are REAL – Brighteon.TV
Pilots are dying within days after taking the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines, sometimes midflight. While mainstream media outlets are quick to cover up these deaths, independent journalist …

Wisconsin sheriff accuses state election commission of violating law in 2020 following major fraud investigation
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Federal judge steps up, temporarily blocks Biden regime from firing federal workers, contractors over COVID vaccine mandate
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Dr. Stella Immanuel: Signs of the end times emerging amid the pandemic – Brighteon.TV
Physician Dr. Stella Immanuel warned that “signs of the end times” have been emerging during the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. She made this claim during the Oct. 27 edition of …

Dr. Bryan Ardis: FDA approved COVID-19 vaccine for kids despite being aware of its risks – Brighteon.TV
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People “accidentally” given COVID-19 vaccines at JBLM military base
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“Crippling workforce shortage” undermines ability of ambulance crews to respond to emergencies
The American Ambulance Association (AAA) warned that it is currently dealing with a “crippling workforce shortage” that threatens to undermine the ability of emergency medical services …

CDC: Immunocompromised individuals may need fourth COVID-19 vaccine dose
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Shipping companies at LA and Long Beach ports will be fined if containers stay in marine terminals too long
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Queensland, Australia threatens to confiscate homes, bank accounts of residents who haven’t paid fines for violating covid mandates
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Daily Digest


Racism In the Public Schools

Posted: 02 Nov 2021 04:35 PM PDT

(John Hinderaker)This is one of the most grotesque instances of racism I have seen in a long time–not just racism in the public schools, but racism, period. It comes from Wayzata, Minnesota, one of the Twin Cities’ wealthiest (and whitest) suburbs. A book called Not My Idea: A Book About Whiteness, supposedly suitable for grades 4 through 6, is on Wayzata’s Reading List and apparently is being used in some other Minnesota schools as well. This is not a local publication; I assume it crops up in schools across the country.

My friend Kendall Qualls called this to our attention. It has to be seen to be believed:

Satan is offering a white kid a bargain. This is the text:

Contract binding you to WHITENESS. You get:

* stolen land

* stolen riches

* special favors

WHITENESS gets:

* to mess endlessly with the lives of your friends, neighbors, loved ones and all fellow humans of COLOR.

* your soul

Sign below

Kendall comments, “Bigotry is wrong regardless of ethnicity.” True. And this is an extreme case. Did the segregated schools of the 1950s in Mississippi and Alabama produce anything remotely approaching the racism of this text? Not that I know of. How about readers published for white children in the antebellum South? Did they contain anything this nakedly racist? Maybe someone can find a similarly awful example, but I won’t hold my breath.

The author of this monstrosity is Anastasia Higginbotham. Contrary to what you might assume, she is not beyond the pale. Her web site indicates that she has been published in a number of venues, including the New York Times and the Huffington Post, and that Not My Idea: A Book About Whiteness “tackles white supremacy and was named a 2019 International Children’s Library White Raven Book.”

White supremacy? When whites rise above number 17 in the Census Bureau’s median income data, maybe we can talk about white supremacy. Until then, forget it.

The problem we have in the U.S. is not white supremacy, it is leftist supremacy. Leftists control nearly all of our institutions, including, with only occasional exceptions, the public schools. Leftists are doing their best to infect our young people with their poisonous racism. Happily, America’s parents are waking up to what is going on. What we see today in Virginia, win or lose, is only a faint precursor of the earthquake that is soon to come.

  

Manchin digs in

Posted: 02 Nov 2021 03:15 PM PDT

(Paul Mirengoff)The Virginia gubernatorial race is the big news of the week. The outcome of the race, whatever it is, will remain Topic A for a while, as it should.

However, the struggle of congressional Democrats to pass their two spending bills — infrastructure and reconciliation — is the big news of this Autumn, and continues to provide headlines.

Yesterday’s development, reported by the Wall Street Journal, was Sen. Joe Manchin’s statement that he won’t vote for a reconciliation bill until there’s a vote on the infrastructure bill. Manchin declared:

The political games [the Democratic left is playing] have to stop. It is time to vote on the [infrastructure] bill—up or down—and then go home and explain to your constituents the decision you made.

Manchin also directed pointed remarks at the way Democrats are writing their reconciliation bill. He said: “As more of the real details outlined in the basic framework are released, what I see are shell games, budget gimmicks, that makes the real cost of the so-called 1.75 trillion dollar bill estimated to be almost twice that amount” unless the programs in the legislation are phased out.

This, Manchin stated, “is a recipe for economic crisis.” He added, “none of us should ever misrepresent to the American people what the real cost of legislation is.”

Does this mean Manchin will vote against reconciliation unless Democrats stop their “shell games and budget gimmicks,” level with the American people, and come up with a package that isn’t a recipe for economic crisis? Maybe.

The Wall Street Journal’s editors read Manchin’s comments as suggesting that he’s prepared to vote against any bill he thinks will hurt the economy. I read them the same way.

At a minimum, Manchin seems firm in his commitment not to vote to expand Medicare as long as its trust fund remains “insolvent.” That’s another way of saying he won’t vote to expand Medicare.

I think it’s also clear that the Democrats are a ways off from coming up with a reconciliation package Manchin can vote for. As the West Virginia Senator says:

I just think it’s going to take quite a while. You’re talking about overhauling the entire tax code. That is tremendous. And there needs to be input. . .and we’re not in a rush right now.

If the Democrats want to delay the infrastructure vote for “quite a while” — in other words, continue to hold it hostage to passing a reconciliation bill — they can. But the “hostage” strategy hasn’t worked so far. Manchin hasn’t softened his positions on reconciliation in order to get a vote on infrastructure.

The Democrats seem to think that passing the infrastructure bill would give Joe Biden a badly needed lift. If so, it makes sense to pass that bill without waiting to formulate a reconciliation package that can get 50 votes.

However, at last word, the president in need of a victory seemed still to be on board with the strategy of insisting that the two spending bills be coupled. And it’s not certain that even if Biden gave up on this strategy, he could bring enough Democratic representatives along to pass the infrastructure bill standing alone.

Today’s election in Virginia might bear on where the spending packages go from here. For example, if Terry McAuliffe loses in “blue” Virginia, Democrats may become desperate enough to pass at least one of their spending bills — infrastructure — though it might take Republican votes in the House to accomplish this, even in that scenario.

  

The tomahawk chop, a postscript

Posted: 02 Nov 2021 11:55 AM PDT

(Paul Mirengoff)John and I both wrote last night about the use of the tomahawk chop by fans of the Atlanta Braves. I speculated that even if the Atlanta Braves tried to stop fans from chopping, the effort would probably be unsuccessful.

Today, a Braves fan informs me that the Braves did, in fact, try to do away with the tomahawk chop two years ago. He writes:

On the first day of the 2019 NLDS, the Braves announced that they were no longer going to do the tomahawk chop as certain communities found it offensive. According to media accounts, the Braves’ players found out literally as they were headed to batting practice and were confused and upset.

The fans tried to keep the tradition going, but I remember a lot of TV trickery to try to minimize it as well as music played over it. Could that have been enough of an edge for the Cardinals to take the series in five games? Who can tell, but it certainly destroyed the home field advantage the Braves enjoy, as shown by this year’s playoffs.

Fast forward two years [Note: Fans were not allowed to attend games in 2020. The cardboard cut-outs who replaced them did not chop] and the Braves bureaucrats have changed their mind. Early in this season, they had a huge promotion at a home game where they invited representatives of various Native American communities. They even had one leader sit in the broadcast booth for an inning, extoling the virtues of the Braves and their outreach.

Perhaps not surprisingly, the chop was back, both on the organ and in the stands. I would love to know what happened behind closed doors to make that switch. I was one of many “I’m done with them!” fans after that series, which lasted about 15 minutes into the next season. And judging from the many tens of thousands of fans that have been in the ballpark and the battery this post season, I am not alone in refusing to be cancelled.

As John says, chop on!

  

The Earthquake Next Time

Posted: 02 Nov 2021 08:51 AM PDT

(John Hinderaker)Parents around the country have awakened to the fact that the far Left, largely via the teachers’ unions, is running our public schools. And they don’t like it. The Virginia governor’s race is the marquee contest this year, but the same issues–Critical Race Theory and whose schools are they, anyway?–are in play in school board races across the country.

In many areas, interest in school board elections is at an unprecedented high. In my state, a school board election in an odd-numbered year would historically draw turnout in the single digits, with few voters other than members of the education cartel having any idea who the candidates are. This year is different. We got texts this morning from our Senate District GOP, identifying the three candidates to vote for and urging us to tell our friends. (I paid for those texts via a modest contribution.)

My wife and I voted at 8:00 this morning; she was voter #65 in our precinct. There was nothing on the ballot except the school board, for which there were sixteen candidates with no identification of incumbents. It is a nonpartisan race, so there was no party identification, either. Who knows, the three conservative rebels might have a shot.

Anti-CRT, pro-parent candidates will win races here and there this year, but my guess is that conservatives didn’t get organized in time to actually win a lot of seats. This year we are seeing tremors; next year, with a full 12 months to get organized and raise money, we will see the earthquake.

In the Virginia race, Terry McAuliffe inflamed opposition by saying that parents should stay out of the schools and let teachers and administrators run them. Subsequently he doubled down, saying the same thing again, rather than backing off. McAuliffe isn’t a very good politician, and many people considered these comments merely to be gaffes.

Actually, though, McAuliffe said what Democrats think. American Experiment polled this in Minnesota, asking, whom do you trust to decide what is taught in the public schools, parents, or teachers and principals? Overall, 42% said they trust parents, while 36% said they trust teachers and principals. But the partisan division was stark. Republicans say they trust parents over educators by 69% to 31%. Democrats, on the other hand, don’t think much of parents. They trust teachers and principals over parents by 54% to 18%.

This discrepancy reflects a major fault line in our society. You can see how sharp the division is in the cross tabs to our poll. Of those who favor teaching Critical Race Theory in the schools, only 9% want parents in charge of the schools. They know that they are subverting our families and our country, and that what they are doing is not popular. Conversely, of those who oppose teaching CRT in the schools, 81% want parents in charge, while only 9% prefer teachers and principals.

We have seen similar poll results in other states. In Virginia, 70% of Democrats said they want school boards to have more influence on curricula than parents.

The Left has declared war on America’s families. The public schools are an important battleground in that war. These issues–Should we be teaching racism and anti-Americanism in the schools? And who, ultimately, is in charge of educating our children?–are winners for conservatives and Republicans.

  

in the Virginia race, election day edition (2)

Posted: 02 Nov 2021 04:52 AM PDT

(Scott Johnson)I’ve been following the Virginia gubernatorial campaign via Twitter. I have found it a valuable resource and thought it provided a good window onto the closing events of the campaign yesterday. Here are a few tweets.

The education issue is red hot in Loudon County. It’s a Democratic stronghold, but Youngkin will cut into the Democratic margin here. The question is how much.

Here to get a vibe check at the @GlennYoungkin rally in Loudoun County. There are hundreds of cars trying to get in. Standstill traffic winding through back roads. These are the people here so far: pic.twitter.com/rffELYwbUC

— Guy Benson (@guypbenson) November 2, 2021

 

I think Youngkin finished up in Virginia Beach. McAuliffe canceled the event he had scheduled in Virginia Beach.

What a homecoming! 2,056 Virginians gathered in Virginia Beach tonight to join our movement, and it was AMAZING. The momentum is with us, Virginia. GO VOTE tomorrow! 🗳🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/cX3Ah8HPFw

— Glenn Youngkin (@GlennYoungkin) November 2, 2021

 

Youngkin had a positive closing message. Will it be enough?

“I’m a kid that was washing dishes and taking out trash in the beach when I was 15 years old, and I’m running to actually fill an office that was held by Patrick Henry and Thomas Jefferson.

“I want to thank you for considering hiring me,” says @GlennYoungkin pic.twitter.com/rX933H6sDQ

— Jake Schneider (@jacobkschneider) November 2, 2021

 

This “report” made me laugh.

omg yall, I’m at a glenn youngkin event RIGHT NOW and you won’t believe what is happening pic.twitter.com/7BmY6apYig

— PoliMath (@politicalmath) November 2, 2021

 

McAuliffe’s closing message wasn’t only “Donald Trump,” per the Politico Playbook report in the adjacent post. It was also racial: Virginia has too many white teachers, etc. Inspirational!

Terry McAuliffe closes his campaign with the message that there are too many white teachers in Virginia schools. He wants to reduce the number of white teachers in order to “make everybody feel comfortable.”pic.twitter.com/E0VwLh7MkX

— Christopher F. Rufo ⚔ (@realchrisrufo) November 1, 2021

 

The Washington Free Beacon’s Brent Scher points out McAuliffe’s changing take on Trump over 48 hours.

McAuliffe Saturday vs. McAuliffe Monday pic.twitter.com/tzk42Nc9Yo

— Brent Scher (@BrentScher) November 2, 2021

 

Mark Herring is the Democratic candidate for Virginia Attorney General. He tweeted out this photo of the event in Fairfax last night. Herring also campaigned together with McAuliffe in Richmond and Roanoke.

WOW! Fairfax is fired up! 🔥 Onward to victory! ✅ https://t.co/6r3P0VEEsJ pic.twitter.com/7RgvaPcyOh

— Mark Herring (@MarkHerringVA) November 1, 2021

 

McAuliffe called on teachers’ union honcho Randi Weingarten to speak on his behalf at his final rally yesterday. I’m not sure of much, but I’m sure she won’t fix McAuliffe’s problem with parents on the issue of education in Virginia. I believe she’s the lady who helped close the schools and keep them closed for as long as possible. Does she think Virginia has too many white teachers?

Wait, what? The night before the election in VA where education might be the top issue, McAuliffe is campaigning with the woman who shut down schools for 18 months? https://t.co/fBH4nFyqiv

— Mark Hemingway (@Heminator) November 2, 2021

 

The Hill reports that, in addition to Weingarten, McAuliffe also brought in the founder of the gun control group Mom’s Demand Action and AFSCME president Dolores Huerta. According to 2020 Census data, union membership in Virginia is only 4.4 percent of the workforce, but the unions represent electoral muscle beyond their numbers.

  

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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION

What You Need To Know
Trump Declares Youngkin Victory Proves MAGA ‘Bigger And Stronger Than Ever Before’Do you hear the sound of the RED WAVE coming?

[…read more]

CNN’s Van Jones Calls Youngkin Win ‘Delta Variant Of Trumpism’ — ‘Same Disease, But Spreads A Lot Faster’Last night was NOT a good one for CNN.

[…read more]



Trending Today
Far-Left ‘Squad’ Member Says Opposing Biden’s $3.5 Trillion Bill Is ‘Anti-Black’Who is electing these lunatics?

[…read more]

Rose McGowan Lashes Out At ‘F***ing Douche’ Alyssa Milano Over Book ExcerptShe can’t stand the liberal activist Milano.

[…read more]

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86.) THE PATRIOT POST

 


87.) DECISION DESK HQ

 


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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK

 


90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE

 


91.) USA TODAY

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Daily Briefing
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3
Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin greets supporters at an election night party in Chantilly, Va., early Wednesday, Nov. 3, 2021, after he defeated Democrat Terry McAuliffe.
Youngkin defeats McAuliffe in Virginia; NJ too close to call
Democrats lose Virginia and worry about New Jersey, kids ages 5-11 can soon get the Pfizer vaccine and more news to start your Wednesday.
Happy Hump Day, Daily Briefing readers! The GOP are celebrating after Republican Glenn Youngkin beat Democrat Terry McAuliffe in the race to be Virginia’s governor. Meanwhile in New Jersey, Republican Jack Ciattarelli and incumbent Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy are neck-and-neck. And kids ages ages 5-11 could get Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine shots in their arms as soon as today.
It’s Steve and Jane, with Wednesday’s news.
🔴New this morning: 121 child deaths. Hundreds of injuries. But these recalled items are still on Facebook MarketplaceHere are 10 to watch out for.
🚔 A push to disband the Minneapolis police department failed for the second time since George Floyd’s death sparked nationwide calls for police reform.
✈️ A Southwest pilot and flight attendant fought over masks. One was cited for alleged assault.
☕️Move over, pumpkin spice! Starbucks’ holiday season drinks, treats and signature red cups return, along with a brand new menu item.
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, hear the latest from elections around the country. Plus, national political correspondent Phillip Bailey talks about what impact they’ll have on next year’s midterms. You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple PodcastsSpotify, or on your smart speaker.
Here’s what’s happening today:

Election Day fallout: Dems suffer major setback in Virginia governor’s race

Polls have closed in an assemblage of off-year elections observers say could be clues about the themes and outcomes of the pivotal 2022 midterm races. At the top of the card was the race for Virginia governor. Early Wednesday, Republican Glenn Youngkin defeated Democrat Terry McAuliffe in a race that was the first major contest since President Joe Biden took office. The loss was a setback to Democrats one year ahead of the 2022 midterms that will decide control of Congress and impact President Joe Biden’s ability to govern and pass legislation. New Jersey’s gubernatorial race appears destined to be called on Wednesday or later this week as Republican Jack Ciattarelli clings to a slight lead over incumbent Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy , as the race remains too close to call. One important caveat from Tuesday’s results will be how several candidates of color across the nation were elected. Michelle Wu, 36, became the first woman and person of color elected to be Boston’s mayor and Ed Gainey will become the first Black mayor of Pittsburgh.
Glenn Youngkin and his wife Suzanne watch results come in on election night at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles on Tuesday in Chantilly, Virginia. Youngkin defeated Democrat Terry McAuliffe to become Virginia's next governor.
Glenn Youngkin and his wife Suzanne watch results come in on election night at the Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles on Tuesday in Chantilly, Virginia. Youngkin defeated Democrat Terry McAuliffe to become Virginia’s next governor.
Anna Moneymaker, Getty Images

Additional coverage of Election Day 2021:

🗳 5 Takeaways from 2021 elections: Race in education drives record turnout in Virginia.
🗳 Analysis from Susan Page: A crushing defeat in Virginia could signal more bad news for Democrats ahead.
🗳Historic firsts: From Boston to Cincinnati, people of color won local elections across the country.
🗳 New York City’s second Black mayor: Former police captain Eric Adams defeated longshot Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa.
🗳 USA TODAY Opinion column: Youngkin’s win in Virginia shows that voters will reward former President Donald Trump’s dangerous Republican Party.
🗳 7 things: This is what campaign ’21 says about campaign ’22 (including Biden, Trump and Black voters).

Senate to vote on advancing John Lewis voting rights act

The Senate will vote on advancing the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act , which would replace part of the 1965 Voting Rights Act that the U.S. Supreme Court struck down in 2013. That year, the high court ruled that states no longer had to comply with Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, which required some states and municipalities with a history of discriminatory voting laws to obtain federal “preclearance” before enacting changes to voting laws or practices. The legislation passed the House in August 219-212 along straight party lines. The vote Wednesday in the Senate comes just two weeks after Democratic leadership attempted to advance another piece of voting rights legislation that was blocked by Republicans with the filibuster.
🗳 ‘A new American fault line’: How new election laws will make it harder for 55 million to vote

What else people are reading:

🚨A Washington state father was arrested on Friday as authorities say he killed his daughter’s boyfriend after allegedly learning he sold her into a sex trafficking ring.
💀The Day of the Dead: Details of the Aztec holiday to remember lost loved ones, explained.
🎤 “The Voice”: Ariana Grande called for a rule change after John Legend’s ‘painful’ decision.
💔“Nothing bad happened”: JoJo Siwa and girlfriend Kylie Prew split after nearly a year of dating.
(L-R) Kylie Prew and JoJo Siwa attend a drive-in screening and performance for the Paramount+ original movie "The J Team" at the Rose Bowl on September 03, 2021 in Pasadena, California.
(L-R) Kylie Prew and JoJo Siwa attend a drive-in screening and performance for the Paramount+ original movie “The J Team” at the Rose Bowl on September 03, 2021 in Pasadena, California.
Leon Bennett, Getty Images

Pfizer vaccine available for children ages 5-11

Children ages 5-11 may receive the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine Wednesday after the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention signed off on an expert panel’s recommendation. Health providers can start vaccinating children in this age group “as soon as possible,” the CDC said in a release. Earlier in the week, presidential advisor Jeffrey Zients said that the Biden administration has ordered enough vaccines to cover all 28 million American children in the 5 to 11 age group. The administration’s distribution program will be “running at full strength” the week of Nov. 8, he said. The vaccines will be available at 100 children’s hospitals, temporary clinics in the community and at schools, as well as pharmacies and pediatricians’ offices.

Atlanta Braves are the 2021 World Series champs!

Three home runs – a huge blast from Jorge Soler and big shots from Dansby Swanson and Freddie Freeman – backed Max Fried’s six shutout innings as the Atlanta Braves routed the Houston Astros 7-0 at Houston’s Minute Maid Park Tuesday night to win their first championship since 1995.  Atlanta finished the regular season with just 88 wins and lost key players along the way such as Ronald Acuna and Charlie Morton. But as USA TODAY baseball columnist Bob Nightengale noted, “They were counted out by everyone, but the only the ones who actually counted, refused to believe it.”
⚾ 2021 World Series MVP: Veteran outfielder Jorge Soler, whom the Braves acquired at the MLB trade deadline in July, clubbed his third go-ahead home run of the series and then was named the MVP.
⚾ “I’m going to give it to Brian”: The Braves never gave up on manager Brian Snitker, in his 47th year with the organization, their players or their season – and now they’re World Series champions.
⚾ “We’ll be back”: Another World Series appearance for Houston Astros manager Dusty Baker, 72, ends in heartbreak again.
⚾ “I’m totally fine”: Atlanta Braves GM Alex Anthopoulos missed his team’s World Series clincher after testing positive for COVID-19. He said he watched the game at home with his family.
Game 6: Catcher Travis d'Arnaud and reliever Will Smith celebrate after the final out.
Game 6: Catcher Travis d’Arnaud and reliever Will Smith celebrate after the final out.
Troy Taormina, USA TODAY Sports
📸 Check out our gallery of the best photos from the 2021 World Series.

Ahead of initial court appearance, Raiders release Henry Ruggs III

The Las Vegas Raiders released Henry Ruggs III just hours before the promising young wide receiver faced an initial court appearance on multiple felony charges after a fiery predawn vehicle crash Tuesday that left a woman dead and Ruggs and his female passenger injured. Ruggs, 22, and his passenger were hospitalized after the Chevrolet Corvette he was driving slammed at high speed into the rear of a Toyota Rav4 in Las Vegas. The Toyota burst into flames and the driver and her dog died, police said. The woman was not immediately identified. Ruggs faces felony charges of driving under the influence of alcohol resulting in death and reckless driving, court records show.

700-year-old law may loom large in Supreme Court gun case

The Supreme Court is expected to debate a 700-year-old English law – and the influence it had on the framing of the Constitution – when it hears oral arguments Wednesday in a closely watched guns case. At issue is whether New York can require residents to have a good reason to obtain a handgun license, a question with ramifications for gun laws nationwide. To find an answer, the justices are expected to look closely at the “history and tradition” of the right to bear arms. While the court in recent years has affirmed the right to possess guns at home for self-defense, it left unanswered questions about carrying those weapons into public places.
The Daily Briefing is free, but several stories we link to in this edition are subscriber-only. Please support our journalism and become a USA TODAY digital subscriber today.
Contributing: The Associated Press
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST


93.) JUST THE NEWS


94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON

Today.
Untouchable Subjects. Fearless, Nonpartisan Reporting.
REPORT: Mayo Clinic vaccine mandate could terminate up to 8,000 employees
On Monday, Nov. 1 in downtown Rochester, Minnesota large crowds took to the streets to protest Mayo Clinics recent announcement of vaccine mandates. The demonstrations lasted over four hours as protestors carried signs and chanted “Shame on Mayo” and “Stop the Mandate.” According to Med City Beat, unvaccinated employees received an email stating that in […]
U.S. cattle ranchers say they aren’t profiting from sky high cost of beef
If you’ve been to the supermarket lately, you’ve probably noticed the price of meat is going up and fast. But while the price you pay has never been higher, many American cattle ranchers say they’re struggling. We sent Lisa Fletcher to Oklahoma to find out why. When it comes time to feed this prized angus […]
(READ) Trump statement on global warming and Afghanistan withdrawal
November 1, 2021 Statement by Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States of AmericaEven Biden couldn’t stand hearing so much about the Global Warming Hoax, the 7th biggest Hoax in America, followed closely behind by the 2020 Presidential Election Scam, Russia, Russia, Russia, Ukraine, Ukraine, Ukraine, Impeachment Hoax #1, Impeachment Hoax #2 and, […]
Sharyl Attkisson is a nonpartisan Investigative Journalist who tries to give you information others don’t want you to have.
So glad you could join us today!

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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG

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JUST IN: US Senator Sends THREAT Straight To The Democrat Party
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96.) NOT THE BEE

Not the Bee

Not the Bee Daily Newsletter

Nov 3, 2021

Sponsored By: Alliance Defending Freedom

Help challenge the vaccine mandate

ImageAmericans may have different opinions about COVID-19 vaccines, but every American should agree that the Biden administration’s threatened mandate is a vast and unlawful executive power grab. Help ensure that Alliance Defending Freedom has the resources necessary to take the Biden administration to court—all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, if necessary!

Please make a gift today

Polling places in Virginia were trying to force voters to wear masks before voting and the state elections department went ahead and put a stop to it

ImageIf you’re a voter in Virginia and you don’t feel like strapping that ol’ strip of cloth to your face before you cast your ballot, we’ve got good news for you: You don’t have to!

“WE LIVE IN A MOVIE!” You need to listen to this woman’s hilarious commentary on elites talking about the new climate cult at the Vatican

ImageWatch this and tell me this isn’t a normal person responding to a weird-as-heck presentation by global elites that’s straight out of a Bond film:

LOL! This truck driver played chicken with some protesters who were blocking his way and he definitely came out the winner

ImageI don’t know about you, but when protesters block roads I find it to be EXTRA immature. Like bro, get out of the way. I have places to be. I cannot afford to be an unemployed lowlife who protests and smokes weed for a living.

Facebook says they are shutting down their program that automatically identifies people in photos using facial recognition

ImageRemember way back when in the yesteryear of 2010, when the quaint little site known as Facebook decided to make it easier for you to tag your friends in photos? It was a great way to make sure people didn’t miss out on a memory of a fun event.

A grocery store chain has reduced the hours of one of its San Francisco locations because of “off the charts” shoplifting

ImageTime for our periodic check into how things are going in San Francisco!

Woke forensic anthropologists no longer want to identify the race of victims, say it “contributes to white supremacy”

ImageDid you know that identifying crucial biometric data to identify victims and catch perpetrators is racist?

Problems with the SpaceX Crew Dragon’s toilet mean that its astronauts will have to go in their pants during their return flight

ImageIn the great Star Trek epic First Contact, a time-traveling Captain Jean-Luc Picard expressed polite envy over a 21st century resident standing on the cusp of galactic space travel and “taking these first steps into a new frontier.”

Biden is so unpopular that Dems are split on whether to replace him in 2024 🤣

ImageThe most popular president in history, ladies and gentlemen!

Oh hey look: Children’s average daily screentime is DOUBLE what it was before the pandemic

ImageWe’ve been told time and again that the past two years of lockdowns and shutdowns and school closures and “quarantines” wouldn’t have much of an effect on kids. “Kids are resilient,” we were told over and over again.

CNN analyst makes a fool of himself by comparing ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ to rhetoric from ISIS, Nazis, KKK

ImageA liberal CNN political analyst just made a fool of himself and I gotta admit it’s pretty fun to watch from the sidelines.

In case you’re wondering how Chicago is doing these days, here’s some guys stealing all the cigarettes from a Walgreens

ImageStay classy, Windy City:

Port bottleneck at Long Beach eased by addressing complex supply-chain dynamics and also putting things on top of other things … but mostly that last part

ImageThere are two ways to address a looming crisis:

You know how Facebook just rebranded as “Meta”? Turns out there’s already a U.S. company named Meta

ImageThis is a bit embarrassing for Facebook:

You knew Trump was gonna have thoughts about Biden falling sleep at that climate summit…

ImageTrump is gonna Trump, and Trump he did.

MSNBC is seriously defending Colin Kaepernick’s claim that playing in the NFL is like being a slave

ImageIt’s amazing how many times the woke will double down to try and prove that their ideas aren’t hot garbage.

Kaepernick implied that black people are somehow less black if white people like them 🤡

ImageFor some reason, the wokey wokes are still trotting out this dude to try to sell their cultish propaganda:

This guy came home to a bear in his kitchen eating his KFC

ImageThis is why you always put your leftover KFC in the fridge:

IMPORTANT: The Babylon Bee Guide to Wokeness is here!

ImageListen to me very carefully:

Behold the majesty of Joe Biden’s greenhouse gas-spewing 86-car entourage rolling up to the UN Climate Conference 😂

ImagePresident Joe Biden wants the world to know that he takes climate change seriously—so seriously, in fact, that he brings along nearly 100 vehicles to a global climate conference to drive the message home:

Terry McAuliffe closed out his campaign by saying he wants to reduce the number of white teachers “to make everyone feel comfortable”

ImageThere was once this dude called MLK who dreamed that his kids would be judged by their character instead of their skin color.

The Left’s pearl clutching over Brandon is embarrassing

ImageFor those who may be unaware, though by this time that number must be startlingly small, the phrase “Let’s Go Brandon” has become a rallying cry for the rapidly increasing portion of our population that disapproves of the manner in which President Biden is executing his presidential duties.

Ever think your job is tough? Watch this mind-boggling video of some Herculean man climbing 2,000 feet up a tower to change a light bulb.

ImageSometimes I come across videos on Youtube that are too good not to share. Last night, my wife and I watched this whole video with sweaty palms. Seriously, there are parts of this video where I can barely believe what I’m seeing. It’s absolutely INSANE what somebody has to do to climb to the top of the KDLT Tower in South Dakota and change out some basic equipment.

This video of a bunch of college kids tripping over themselves as they run out onto an elevated basketball court is guaranteed to make your day

ImageOkay, I could watch this video for the rest of the day and I’d still be over here laughing at midnight.

LOL: Hero Virginia Man Runs His Lawnmower During Terry McAuliffe’s Speech, Preventing The Small Crowd From Hearing Him

ImageThis is absolutely hilarious.

This has to be the hit of the year so far

ImageOkay, sign me up for never playing a down in the NFL, because this is just too much right here:

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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT

 


98.) NEWSMAX

 


99.) MARK LEVIN

November 2, 2021

November 2, 2021

On Tuesday’s Mark Levin Show, it’s election night in Virginia, New Jersey, and New York. The State of Virginia has passed a law requiring absentee votes to be processed faster so a winner should be known by late tonight or tomorrow morning. Former Governor Terry McAuliffe is looking at a lower turnout than the previous gubernatorial election which benefits the larger-than-normal turnout for Glenn Youngkin who needs 57% of the vote to clinch a win tonight. Then, attorney Marc Elias has a reputation for litigating election challenges and successfully suing to change election outcomes and regulations. In March, Elias and his firm were sanctioned for their practices. Interestingly, vote reporting is late coming out of Fairfax County, this is unusual and problematic. Later, educational bureaucrats like Randi Weingarten and the media are lying about critical race theory and are pushing for Terry McAuliffe and Phil Murphy. Some teachers have admitted that students should be taught many theories and critical race theory is among those. Recent news of a sexual assault in a Loudoun County, VA school may affect swing voters in favor of Youngkin.

THIS IS FROM:

Twitter
VA Election LIES: The media are lying about Critical Race Theory. CRT is taught in Virginia schools

Daily Signal
4 Facts to Know About Democrat Election Lawyer Marc Elias

The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.

Image used with permission of Getty Images / Win McNamee


100.) WOLF DAILY

 


101.) THE GELLER REPORT

Breaking news stories the media complex won’t cover. Share widely.

For more information on any post below, click through to read the full article on our website.


BREAKING: YOUNGKIN WINS! GOP SWEEP! Republicans Win Virginia Attorney General, Lt. Governor; House Of Delegates

A Red wave in Blue Virginia. The people of Virginia completely rebuked the radicalism of the Left. The Democrats have been decimated in Virginia.“These numbers are bad. These are our voters who have abandoned us in droves…a five alarm …


VIRGINIA GOES RED – Big Night for GOP

The GOP hasn’t won statewide office in Virginia in 12 years, but could sweep all three tonight.LET’S GO BRANDON!

Youngkin wins VA Governor

Sears wins VA Lieutenant Governor

Miyares wins VA Attorney General

Carey wins OH-15 …


Stealing Virginia

And s it begins. Youngkin has been running ahead, so the Democrats are “are re-scanning ballots” and delaying the vote count. If they pull this off, I hope Virginians take to the streets with pitchforks and torches. This is beyond the pale. …


Deported CHILD SEX OFFENDER nabbed in Michigan after returning to US illegally

Coming to your neighborhood….. by the millions.Deported Honduran child sex offender nabbed in Michigan after returning to US illegally

Juan Dias-Pineda, 51, had been deported after sexually assault child under 13

By Stephen Sorace | …


World Leaders ‘Laughing at Biden’

Actually, they are laughing at Americans = throwing away freedom and happiness with both hands and submitting to tyranny. We deserve the world’s contempt and scorn.World Leaders ‘Laughing at Biden’: Trump Blasts Biden for Embarrassing the …


CIVIL WAR? Large Percentage of GOP Thinks Violence is Necessary to Fix USA

‘Once the country accepts censorship of speech, then nothing can be won without violence.’ said Ayn Rand. “Traditionally and historically, the American people can be pushed just so far, and then they stop it.”It is our duty to stop it. …


MONSTER: Fauci Funded Research To Graft Scalps of Aborted Babies Onto Rats

This isn’t medicine, this is Mengele.https://welovetrump.com/2021/10/30/new-reports-fauci-funded-research-to-graft-scalps-of-aborted-babies-onto-rats/

This is perversion of God’s creation at the highest order!

Why would anyone need …


SLEEPY JOE: Biden Fall Asleep During Opening Remarks at UN Climate Summit

Millions of Americans voted against President Trump because they disliked his demeanor, and his tweets, and his hair. Now America is paying the price. It’s no wonder why China, North Korea, and Iran are emboldened. The Biden Administration has …

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102.) CNS

 


103.) RELIABLE NEWS

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104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL

 


105.) DC CLOTHESLINE

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110.) RIGHT & FREE

Military Spending

We’re out of Afghanistan. Good. We should have gotten out before. Our involvement there was America’s longest war, longer than the Civil War, World War I…

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Critical Race Theory is Marxist.
Its real target is Christianity and the Bible.
The far left wants it in our schools.
The war on Christians is in full gear, says a most famous Jewish thinker.
Read below.

Dear Reader,

The Biden administration and the “Woke” left are embracing a radical new approach to our culture and life.

It’s called “Critical Race Theory.”

In a nutshell it claims that people who are “white” and from “European” backgrounds have succeeded because of their color, and they have OPPRESSED people of color.

Thus, people of color have been wronged and if they FIGHT BACK in any way then they are MORALLY right.

Make no mistake about it, the left’s anti-Christian and anti-Semitic agenda is being ramped up dramatically…

… and it’s frightening.

Think about it.

The governor of California, Gavin Newsom, actually banned private home Bible studies, while OK’ing mass BLM protests and worse…

This is a sickening violation of religious freedom.

Why?

Well, there is a famous Jewish author and thinker who has an answer.

But the truth may be quite unsettling…

This author claims it has nothing to do with COVID-19 and it has nothing to do with race.

But it has everything to do with the power grab by the left to systematically dismantle religion and banish God from the lips, minds, and hearts of the faithful…

… remove His holy name from our civil society, even destroying religious symbols and artifacts along the way.

Think about this:

The media was so proud of tens of thousands of BLM protesters last year who rampaged through our cities…

And yet, in San Francisco the Roman Catholic archdiocese was slapped with a cease-and-desist order saying some churches violated a local ban on large outdoor gatherings.

Under Critical Race Theory, the BLM protests are “good” even if they violate public health orders, but if Christians want to meet and pray — that’s bad and evil!

Oh, but it gets worse…

Then singing and chanting in church was banned.

“To forbid singing in a church is morally reprehensible. That is how we petition Heaven,” said one evangelical minister.

Churches are still oppressed, some barely clinging to life, close to financial ruin.

They may never recover.

If churches and synagogues are drowning financially, they can’t reach out into the community to feed the hungry, clothe the poor, and help those drowning in a sea of debt and despair.

Unable to attend worship services, people are becoming disconnected and distanced from their faith.

This is the war on Christianity, and this is exactly what the left has dreamed about for decades.

Everything you need to know is exposed inside David Horowitz’s runaway bestseller, Dark Agenda.

First you should know, David Horowitz is not a Christian.

He is a Jew.

But he calls it like he sees it. And he’s deeply troubled by what he sees…

You may remember us warning you about the plan to annihilate religion.

  • Bill Maher shouting “death to religion” on national TV…
  • Monuments in Washington whitewashed of God and
    prayer…
  • Religious crosses confiscated…
  • Lenten ashes on children’s foreheads being scrubbed off at school. . .
  • Prayer in school being ruled unconstitutional overnight…

Whether you do or don’t remember any of the above, please keep reading.

This is serious stuff. Our faith and our ability to worship freely is in serious jeopardy.

If you’re a person of faith, this directly impacts you, your family, friends, and loved ones — and it’s terrifying.

Every day the writing on the wall becomes clearer.

Listen…

Hatred is growing in our nation toward Jews and Christians — being spread like wildfire.

Why? What is behind this evil movement?

Everything you need to know is laid out by David Horowitz in his bestselling book, Dark Agenda.

The highly respected New York Times bestselling author details where it all started and with whom.

When Horowitz first set out to write Dark Agenda, he planned on writing a book about a possible coming persecution against Christians.

But then, Horowitz was shocked to discover something dark and evil…

Horrifically, the persecution had already started.

Dark Agenda has rocked the media and political world.

Tucker Carlson said he couldn’t put the book down.

Tucker said you must “read this disturbing but vital book.”
Mike Huckabee has urged every Christian to get and read this book.

Gov. Huckabee said this book was the best one he had ever read defending Christians — and it was written by a Jew!

And Glenn Beck reports Dark Agenda reveals a “dangerous” situation we all face.

Horowitz uncovered the roots of this hateful, deadly movement and put it all in his new book, Dark Agenda: The War to Destroy Christian America.

Look, there’s no other way to say this…

If you’re a Christian or Jew or a faithful follower of God, you must read this book.

Folks, this is religious intolerance fueled by the left for 60 years — a deep-seated animosity inciting vicious hate crimes and gaining momentum fast. Just look at this:

A headline that recently appeared on CBS News:

“U.S. ‘moving into a dangerous phase’ as anti-Semitic incidents surge.”

Everyone must WAKE UP, which is why we’re giving you Dark Agenda for FREE!

This is all part of the plan set in motion decades ago to rid God from public life.

In fact…

After a nearly 15-year drop, the Anti-Defamation League found acts of anti-Semitism started spiking in 2016.

What’s worse, the most recent numbers show the highest number of anti-Semitic incidents in its recorded history.

There were over 2,100 acts of violence — assaults, vandalism, and harassment — against Jews.

Please, for all these reasons and atrocities being committed, we urge you now more than ever…

Read this book. Remember, it’s a FREE Offer, compliments of Newsmax.

We’re completely wiping out the retail price of $26.99 for you — it’s THAT critical we get this book in your hands.

Yep… we’re eating the cost so you can read this book.
We must protect Christianity and Judaism before it’s too late — and save our most basic freedom of religion.

In Dark Agenda, you’ll discover the plan that was set in place decades ago… and the series of events that have unfolded, allowing the plan to take hold.

Horowitz names names — Obama, Hillary, and the big media pushing this secular agenda.

There are new ones now: Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Andrew Cuomo, and more. They want a Godless society.

They’re totally cool if thousands want to riot in protest against President Trump, breaking all COVID-19 rules.

But if you want to go to church or synagogue — with social distancing — they want you arrested!

You’ll discover who was responsible… how the Supreme Court failed Christian America… why school administrators are brainwashing our kids… and the names of those carrying out the plan in Washington today.

When you’re done reading Dark Agenda, you’ll understand the deep divide in America.

This is critical as we roll into the post-election year.

As Horowitz explains, President Trump has been at the very epicenter of this battle between the forces of good and evil right here in America.

And Horowitz says President Trump, out of office, will actually be a bigger threat — and a bigger target — for the far left.

We must fight back, or our children and generations to come will live in fear of expressing their faith.

Your Friends at Newsmax

P.S. Hurry! Shortly before he died, Rush Limbaugh talked about Dark Agenda. He said the future of America depended on this battle between the forces of good and evil. You need to Claim your FREE BOOK before we run out of copies. Remember, Newsmax is giving you Dark Agenda: The War to Destroy Christian America absolutely FREE.You can’t get this $26.99 book for FREE anywhere else except from Newsmax — or a friend willing to give you their copy!Click here.

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112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO

 


113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES

 


114.) WAKING TIMES

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In the 11/02/2021 edition:
The World Has Fallen Under A Spell

Most people don’t realize it, and those that get it don’t fully understand how this spell keeps you locked in self-sabotaging and self-defeating behavior.

Join me for a special live event. I’m going to tell you the extraordinary story of how the system got inside of my head, and show you three simple ways you can take back control of your life.
Learn More…

We’re being censored, banned and demonitized. Follow us on Telegram and bypass the gatekeepers. 

Shocking Social Experiments Demonstrate Why Conformity and Blind Obedience to Authority Have Gone Viral

Nov 02, 2021 03:09 pm
Dylan Charles – We are hard wired for social conformity, and it’s one of the most dangerous aspects of the human condition.

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Huxley’s New World – The War on Science and the 20th Century Descent of Man

Nov 02, 2021 08:32 am
Cynthia Chung – Huxley makes it crystal clear that he considers the world to be overpopulated, and that science and progress cannot be free to advance without limits.

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How to Fight Vaccine Mandates and Passports

Nov 02, 2021 08:12 am
Dr. Mercola – Just how much freedom are you willing to lose?

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115.) UNCOVER DC