Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday November 4, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 11.4.21
Who’s up, down, in and out — your morning tipsheet on Florida politics.
So, you think your vote doesn’t count, right?
Candidates in Florida’s 20th Congressional District will disagree with you.
The top two candidates in Tuesday’s Democratic primary to fill the seat of the late Alcee Hastings were separated by a mere dozen votes out of 49,002 that were cast in the 11-candidate race.
Broward County Commissioner Dale Holness had 11,644 votes to 11,632 for progressive activist Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick. The other nine candidates in the field were far behind.
That total is likely to change in the coming days, but either way, it appears to be well within the margin to trigger a recount in this heavily Democratic district.
The South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported that Broward County has 14 provisional ballots and about 20 mail ballots with signature defects. Broward also sent 553 ballots overseas, but only 27 have been returned. The deadline for the overseas ballots to arrive is Nov. 12.
That’s a lot of variables in a race this close.
Holness, a fixture for years in Broward politics, is generally considered a moderate. Cherfilus-McCormick, however, is unabashedly progressive.
She blanketed local television with ads promising $1,000 a month to people making less than $75,000 a year. She proposed to pay for the program by raising taxes on corporations.
Even if she wins this election, that idea has less than an ice cube’s chance on the surface of the Sun of becoming reality. It did, however, make enough of a splash to get her this far in the battle to succeed Hastings, an icon in South Florida politics.
The winner advances to the General Election on Jan. 11 against Republican Jason Mariner.
“Big money overpowers apathy in a flawed special election” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — Nine votes. For now, that’s all that separates the two top Democratic finishers in a special election in South Florida’s 20th Congressional District. The outcome is not yet clear, but this much seems certain: Holness or Cherfilus-McCormick is headed to Capitol Hill in January to take the place of the late Rep. Hastings in an overwhelmingly Democratic district. Democrats had an unusually large field of 11 candidates to choose from, but most voters, unimpressed or disinterested, skipped the race and stayed home. At times, it seemed there were more candidates than voters. The two finalists are flawed in very different ways, and the unofficial results reaffirm the influence of big money in a low-turnout election.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@AshleyMoodyFL: Congratulations to @GlennYoungkin, @WinsomeSears and @JasonMiyaresVA! Virginians have chosen freedom and said no to big government. Florida stands with you, and I look forward to working together.
—@CharlieCrist: Americans made their voices heard yesterday and we have one year to roll up our sleeves and get to work. I’m running for Governor because Floridians deserve and demand results — better jobs, lower prices, and schools where students and teachers thrive.
—@JimmyPatronis: The woke-defund the police crowd just got a gut check this evening, and I love it! People love police because they want to live in safe communities. Simple as that. #BackTheBlue
—@RepGregSteube: The voters in Minnesota have spoken and have rejected the radical and dangerous Defund the Police movement. Inhibiting law enforcement only exacerbates crime rates and puts public safety at risk.
—@michaelgwaltz: The American people have spoken — and now Dems are reintroducing the SALT tax provisions that will give tax breaks to the top 5% of earners in high tax states in the Northeast (aka their political donors). So much for Biden’s plan to tax the rich.
—@BenDiamondFL: “The news comes days after Roger Stone threatened to challenge (Ron) DeSantis if he didn’t conduct an election audit.” This should tell you everything you need to know about the Governor’s latest anti-voter proposal.
—@JaredEMoskowitz: Get stuff done. It’s that simple.
—@sparksjls: If I was the Democratic Party, I would simply pass the bills that are wildly popular and will improve folks’ lives and then run on them the next election.
—@fineout: Meanwhile, @FLSecofState Laurel Lee — has launched a new page dedicated to election integrity that says the 2020 election was “accurate and transparent” in Fla. Page says dept. got 262 fraud complaints in 2020, forwarded 71 to authorities
—@OWillis: Too many liberals think running ads is the whole ballgame. If it were, Michael Bloomberg would have been the nominee last year
—@RosemaryOHara14: I recently donated to @UF and was discussing a legacy gift. Today, I requested @PresidentFuchs remove my name from all fundraising databases. I am appalled by his decision to prohibit paid faculty testimony in #Florida’s election law case. His explanation is beneath his office.
— DAYS UNTIL —
The Blue Angels 75th anniversary show — 1; Disney’s ’Eternals’ premieres — 1; ’Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 2; ’Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 4; U.S. to lift restrictions for fully vaccinated international travelers — 4; Miami at FSU — 6; ‘Hawkeye’ premieres — 10; Special Session on vaccine mandates begins — 11; ExcelinEd National Summit on Education begins — 14; FSU vs. UF — 23; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 25; Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri’s death — 33; Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 36; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 43; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 48; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 55; CES 2022 begins — 62; NFL season ends — 66; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 68; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 68; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 68; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 69; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 71; NFL playoffs begin — 72; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 92; Super Bowl LVI — 101; Daytona 500 — 108; St. Pete Grand Prix — 115; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 121; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 184; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 204; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 210; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 246; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 258; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 337; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 365; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 372; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 407; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 470; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 624. ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 715; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 995.
— EPILOGUE —
All politics is … — “The Democrat shouted ‘Trump, Trump, Trump!’ But that’s not what voters wanted to hear” via Nolan Finley of the Miami Herald — Democrat Terry McAuliffe ran a nationally focused campaign, centered on constantly raising the specter of Donald Trump and the Capitol riot. But this election was about local issues, or in this case, about how the Democrats’ national woke agenda impacted people at the local level. McAuliffe had a comfortable lead. And then school started. Parents angry and frustrated about mask mandates and race-based curricula forced on their children started packing school board meetings. Their anger crystallized when Attorney General Merrick Garland sicced the FBI on parents who spoke out at the meetings, labeling them domestic terrorists. Instead of stepping away from that obvious land mine, McAuliffe jumped on it. He made one of the most suicidal comments ever by a politician when he declared: “I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.” Parents were not willing to hand over their children to the state and walk away.
“It turns out that the GOP can be energized without Donald Trump” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — It didn’t take long for Trump to take credit for Youngkin’s victory in Virginia’s gubernatorial race. At 9 p.m., before most outlets had called the race, Trump’s political action committee released a statement on his behalf, thanking his “BASE for coming out in force” to support Youngkin. After all, without him on the ballot, Republicans got wiped out in 2018, in part because Republicans weren’t as motivated as Democrats to vote. In every one of Virginia’s 133 counties and cities, Youngkin outperformed Trump’s 2020 margins. Part of that is almost certainly that 2020 Joe Biden was more appealing than 2021 McAuliffe. But part of it, too, was that Youngkin managed to have broader appeal than Trump himself.
“Joe Biden says Virginia race wasn’t blowback against him” via Colleen Long and Aamer Madhani of The Associated Press — Biden said Wednesday the Democrats’ setbacks in Tuesday’s elections underscore that the Party needs to “produce for the American people,” but he pushed back against the notion that the off-year election results were a repudiation of his presidency. Biden suggested that his inability to get Congress to pass a $1 trillion infrastructure deal and a $1.75 trillion package of social and climate programs ahead of the voting didn’t make a difference. “I think we should have passed it before Election Day, “ Biden said. ”But I’m not sure that I would have been able to change” people’s minds in Republican-leaning areas either way. He added that “people are upset and uncertain about a lot of things,” including the pandemic, the job market, and the price of gasoline.
“The 2021 backlash was far bigger than the 2017 backlash against Trump” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — Neither Virginia nor New Jersey are yet done counting votes from Tuesday’s General Election. A lot can still change. But what we already know suggests that both states saw voters shift to the right dramatically — far more than they shifted to the left in 2017 in response to Trump’s election. This is obvious at the state level, of course. Biden won both states by double-digit margins. The gubernatorial results in each state suggest a shift of a bit more than 10 points. In 2017, both states elected Democrats after supporting Hillary Clinton over Trump in 2016. The shifts to the left then were much more modest: a bit under four points in Virginia and a negligible amount in New Jersey.
“A sobering reality hits Democrats after election losses” via Dan Balz of The Washington Post — Youngkin’s victory over McAuliffe in Virginia’s gubernatorial Election was not a total surprise. But the full impact of the loss in a state that Biden won by 10 points just 12 months ago, along with a far closer gubernatorial race than anyone expected in New Jersey, which Biden won by 16 points, triggered alarms across the Party. Next year, the entire Democratic Party will face the voters, with Republicans more confident than ever that they have the issues, whether education, inflation or the border, as well as the strategy and a strong tail wind to drive Democrats from power in the House and Senate. How quickly Democrats absorb Tuesday’s results and begin to respond will determine how well they can hold down expected losses in 2022.
“The Democratic unraveling began with schools” via Zachary D. Carter of The Atlantic — Youngkin’s victory was about schools. It wasn’t about Trump, inflation, defunding the police, Medicare for All, or Biden’s infrastructure agenda. It wasn’t really about critical race theory or transgender rights — though those issues shaded the situation a bit by highlighting anxieties surrounding the education system. Fundamentally, the contest was about schools — specifically, how many parents remain frustrated by how public schools have handled the coronavirus pandemic. Whether the Virginia results translate to other states will depend on how schools in those states reacted to the spread of COVID-19 and whether a major national issue can take the place of these local frustrations in voters’ minds.
“Florida Republicans giddy about 2022 as Democrats struggle in Virginia, New Jersey” via Alex Daugherty and Bianca Padró Ocasio of the Miami Herald — U.S. Rep. Mario Díaz-Balart, doughnut in hand on Wednesday morning, smiled as he described election night as his “Super Bowl.” The Miami Republican saw his Party flip the high-profile Virginia Governor’s race and nearly score a major gubernatorial upset in New Jersey — and the GOP performed well in competitive down-ballot races across the country, including a Black woman Lt. Gov. in Virginia and a Cuban American Attorney General who is on the verge of winning in the same state. The major takeaway for Díaz-Balart? Voters rejected government control. “The American people don’t welcome, never bought into this agenda of the government running everybody’s lives,”
“Reeling Democrats see threat to House and Senate control as Republicans crack their 2020 coalition” via Sean Sullivan of The Washington Post — Democrats reeling from the Party’s showing on Tuesday night were sharply critical of its direction and agenda, concluding it threatens to devastate their efforts to hold on to the House and Senate next year much as it dragged down this year’s candidates. There were also repudiations of liberal efforts in varied races, including in Minneapolis, where voters spurned an attempt to replace the police department with a comprehensive safety agency. The circumstances in the two governor’s races all but confirmed the collapse of the coalition that propelled Democrats to power during the Trump administration and Biden to the presidency in 2020.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Ron DeSantis proposes law enforcement office in ‘election integrity’ follow-up” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis hopes to create an election-fraud investigation office as part of another proposed election law package, the follow-up to legislation currently facing legal challenges. During a rally in West Palm Beach on Wednesday, the morning after Election Day, the Governor told supporters he seeks another “election integrity” measure. DeSantis’ proposal includes establishing a statewide law enforcement office to investigate and prosecute election crimes and fraud. The Governor complained that local law enforcement offices don’t always enforce election crimes because of apathy, workload, or lack of experience. “If someone’s ballot harvesting, you report it to these people, and this is their sole job,” DeSantis said.
“Princeton legal scholar advises UF to back off restricting professors in suit against state” via Jimena Tavel of the Miami Herald — A free-speech legal scholar from Princeton University told Florida’s top public university administrators Wednesday he believes the University of Florida should allow its professors to weigh in on any litigation regardless of whether they would be paid and regardless if it’s against the state, saying to do otherwise would impinge on their First Amendment rights. “I urge universities here in Florida and the University of Florida to get this controversy behind it as quickly as possible by simply interpreting the conflicts [of interest] in a way that do not distinguish paid or unpaid, and would give broad permission to testify as to what you are in fact an expert on,” Robert George, a prominent Princeton professor of politics and conservative legal scholar, said.
“Gabriella Passidomo nomination passes first Senate panel” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — A Senate panel gave the first OK Tuesday for Passidomo to serve on the Public Service Commission. Among those casting yea-votes was Passidomo’s mother. Passidomo is the daughter of Sen. Kathleen Passidomo, a Naples Republican who is the Senate President-designate and who sits on the Senate Regulated Industries Committee, the panel that heard Gabriella Passidomo’s confirmation on Tuesday. DeSantis appointed Gabriella Passidomo to be a Commissioner in May, selecting her from a pool of nine applicants. The position pays nearly $136,000 per year.
“Beach smoking change clears first Senate committee” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — An effort to make more Florida beaches cigarette-free cleared its first Senate committee Wednesday morning. The Senate Community Affairs Committee voted unanimously to advance legislation (SB 224) to allow cities and counties the right to regulate smoking in public beaches and parks. Sen. Joe Gruters, a Sarasota Republican, has pushed for years to give that right back to local governments. He noted his home community of Sarasota previously had a ban on smoking on the beach, but a lawsuit in 2013 made clear the right to regulate smoking lays firmly with the state. He noted many beach rankings, including the Florida International University-based Dr. Beach annual listings, give points for beaches remaining smoke-free. “There’s no reason we can’t get those points and be No. 1 year after year,” Gruters said.
“Joe Gruters wants forced vaccinations out of Florida law” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Amid an emergency, Florida’s Department of Health can mandate citizens receive vaccines. Sen. Gruters wants that ability taken away. The Sarasota Republican on Tuesday filed legislation (SB 734) removing any language about vaccines or vaccinations from powers in a public health emergency. It’s an identical bill to House legislation (HB 6009) filed in August by Rep. Anthony Sabatini, a Howey-in-the-Hills Republican, that still awaits an agenda in the House Pandemics and Public Emergencies Committee. Florida law today allows broad powers to demand citizens receive medical attention during a pandemic. Gruters’ bill only impacts the ability to require individuals to receive vaccinations. The only change to the relevant statute, at least as the bill is written today, is to remove five mentions of vaccines.
“Senate bill would slash mandates at nursing homes” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Nursing home residents could have the time spent with licensed nurses reduced by more than 113% under a proposal filed by Sen. Ben Albritton. Skilled nursing facilities currently are required to provide residents with 3.6 hours of licensed nursing care per day, of which 2.5 hours can be provided by a certified nursing assistant. SB 804 would reduce the 3.6-hour nursing care requirement to one hour. And in place of the 2.5 hours of CNA care, Albritton’s bill would allow nursing home facilities to provide what is called 2.5 hours of “direct care,” instead. AARP Florida State Director Jeff Johnson told Florida Politics Wednesday the bill all but removes the “nursing” requirement from Florida’s nursing homes and that his association opposes the measure.
“So far, Texas-style abortion bill in Florida seems headed nowhere in the Legislature” via Issac Morgan of Florida Phoenix — It’s been nearly two months since Texas began enforcing the most restrictive anti-abortion law in the nation. A few weeks later, a copycat bill landed in the Florida Legislature. Like the Texas version, the measure would ban abortions after about six weeks and rely on private citizens to enforce it by suing individuals helping women secure abortion services. But since state Rep. Webster Barnaby filed HB 167 on Sept. 22, no companion bill has appeared in the Florida Senate. Barnaby’s bill has been routed to the House’s Professions & Public Health Subcommittee but hasn’t come up yet. Barnaby remains the lone sponsor. Meanwhile, two powerful Republicans have expressed opposition to relying on private citizens, rather than public officials, to enforce any abortion ban.
—”Lawmakers propose bill to support students with epilepsy” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics
“Dana Trabulsy files bill to include history of African American cemeteries in public schools” via Daniel Figueroa of Florida Politics — Trabulsy Tuesday filed legislation to encourage Florida public schools to teach children the history of local African American cemeteries. The bill would add one sentence to the existing Florida statute on the teaching of African American history. “Members of the instructional staff are encouraged to include the history of local African American cemeteries in the study of the history of African Americans when practicable,” the sentence reads. The bill comes after the 2019 discovery of a forgotten African American cemetery beneath a Tampa Heights neighborhood. That find spurred the search and eventual discovery of more African American cemeteries around Tampa Bay and Florida.
“Lawmakers briefed on state contractor audit” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Chief Inspector General Melinda Miguel updated lawmakers Wednesday on the progress of a sweeping financial audit targeting hundreds of state contractors. DeSantis ordered the audit in February 2020 after news reports revealed exorbitant payouts to the Florida Coalition Against Domestic Violence leadership. The audit called for a review of three categories: organizations with a public-private agreement with a state agency, organizations that receive 50% of funding from the state or federal government, and contracted organizations that exceed leadership compensation limits. In all, state agencies are locked into a sole-source, public-private agreement with 166 unique agencies. Another 561 entities, meanwhile, receive 50% or more of their budget from the state or from a combination of state and federal funds.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Robert Beck, PinPoint Results: University Area Community Development Corporation
Charles Chapman IV, C4 Strategies: Florida League of Cities
Carlecia Collins, GrayRobinson: STEPS
William Johnson, Aeropandion: Melbourne Orlando International Airport
Lori Killinger, Kasey Lewis, Chris Lyon, Lewis Longman & Walker: Shef
Victoria Price: Florida Public Utilities
David Ramba, Evan Power, Cameron Yarbrough, Ramba Consulting Group: Lakeport Water Association, Petland
Lisa Saliba: Department of Transportation
Lauren Trevathan, Capitol Alliance Group: League of Women Voters of Florida
Stephen Winn, Stephen R. Winn and Associates: Union County Sheriff’s Office
Legislative committee meeting schedule:
— The House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Subcommittee meets for an update on the state’s pretrial release system, 9 a.m., Room 404 of the House Office Building.
— The House Children, Families and Seniors Subcommittee meets for an update on the “livable communities” initiative by AARP and the Florida Department of Elder Affairs, 11 a.m., Reed Hall of the House Office Building.
— The House Higher Education Appropriations Subcommittee meets to discuss electronic textbooks, 11 a.m., Room 404 of the House Office Building.
— The Joint Legislative Budget Commission meets to discuss budget-related changes, 11:30 a.m., Room 412 of the Knott Building.
Farewell — The family of former Rep. Bill Hager invites you to celebrate his life on Thursday, Nov. 18. Hager, who served Florida House District 87 from 2010 to 2018, died Wednesday in North Dakota. He was 74. Before winning a House seat, Hager served on the Boca Raton City Council from 2002 to 2009 and was Deputy Mayor from 2004 to 2005. Before coming to Florida, Hagar was Iowa Assistant Attorney General from 1975 to 1976, the first Deputy Commissioner for the Iowa Insurance Department for the subsequent two years, and Iowa Insurance Commissioner from 1986 until 1990, when he moved to Boca Raton. The Celebration of Life begins at 6 p.m., Advent Lutheran Church, 300 E. Yamato Road, Boca Raton.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida COVID-19 update: 1,804 cases added to tally; hospitalizations still on the decline” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Florida reported 1,804 COVID-19 cases and no new deaths on Tuesday. The Florida Department of Health will most likely add more deaths to Tuesday’s total, increasing it from zero. The state has done this in the past when it has added cases and deaths to previous days during the pandemic. In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,654,441 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 59,499 deaths. On average, the state has added 81 deaths and 1,607 cases per day in the past seven days. There were 1,865 people hospitalized for COVID-19 in Florida. COVID-19 patients take up 3.43% of all inpatient beds in the latest report’s hospitals, compared to 3.51% in the previous day’s reporting hospitals.
“Children’s COVID-19 vaccines are arriving in Florida. Schools will have them next week. Here’s how parents can make appointments.” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — COVID-19 vaccine supply for children will be plentiful in South Florida, with pharmacies, hospitals and even local schools announcing they all plan to offer the shots. The demand for children’s COVID-19 vaccines is high: The initial rush started Wednesday with parents making appointments to get their young children ages 5 to 11 vaccinated. Pharmacies such as CVS and Walgreens allowed parents to make appointments online for slots beginning on Saturday. And by midmorning, many of the weekend times were filled. Through its partnership with the Florida Department of Health in Broward, Broward County Public Schools will make vaccines available to children 5 to 11 at district elementary and middle schools as early as next week.
“Broward teachers got their shots, and a bonus, too” via Brooke Baitinger of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Most of Broward County’s public school teachers and district staff received their COVID-19jabs with a $250 bonus as a reward. Almost 19,000 employees qualified for the vaccine incentive in total — 10,716 teachers and 8,278 non-teachers. That’s nearly 75% of the district’s teachers and 68% of district staff. The School Board offered the bonus to encourage all 27,989 employees to get vaccinated. The incentive was available to any employee who received a vaccine by Oct. 20. The numbers were not broken down by school or grade. The incentive money adds up to about $4.7 million.
“‘We’re losing kids’: Monroe County School District concerned about truancy” via Charlotte Twine of Keys Weekly — At the Oct. 12 and Oct. 16 Monroe County School Board meetings, board members and staff said that they are concerned about students’ “chronic absenteeism” and truancy. The staff is actively taking steps to address the problem. “I’m concerned because we’re losing kids” to truancy, said Board Member Mindy Conn at the Oct. 12 meeting. Mike Henriquez coordinates the alternative education department and works on student attendance and truancy for the school district. He explained that the difference between a child who is “chronically absent” and a child who is “truant” is that a truant child has had 15 unexcused absences within 90 days and therefore has been “flagged” for a more formal process.
“A place to reset: Teacher wellness lounges installed in some schools” via Brett Shweky of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Hoping to provide a way for teachers to de-stress during work, the American Heart Association recently installed wellness lounges for staff at seven schools in Broward and Palm Beach counties. In the program’s inaugural year, Nob Hill (Sunrise), Tamarac, Peters (Plantation), Lauderhill Paul Turner and Colbert (Hollywood) elementary schools were selected in Broward County, while Indian Pines Elementary (Lake Worth) and Royal Palm Beach High School were chosen in Palm Beach County. Acknowledging the challenges teachers and school staff faced over the COVID-19 pandemic, the American Heart Association made the wellness lounges possible with the help of its Heart Walk sponsor, Cleveland Clinic.
— 2022 —
“DeSantis says Republican ‘wave’ is building in 2022, will be bigger than 2010” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — DeSantis joined Fox and Friends Wednesday after what he described as a Republican wave in off-year gubernatorial elections in Virginia and potentially New Jersey. DeSantis, who likes to say he’s “standing in the way” of the Biden administration, exulted as Tuesday night’s vote showed that message resonated even in states that were decidedly pro-Biden a year before, and that historically perform Democratic. He predicted a historic wave election next year. “And if you go back to the 2010 wave that Republicans had, I think there’s more dissatisfaction with what’s going on now in D.C. today than there was this time in that election cycle. And that is good news for Republicans. And that is bad news for Joe Biden and his regime,” DeSantis added.
“DeSantis goes on the offensive: ‘I’ve only begun to fight’” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — DeSantis embarked on a conservative crusade Wednesday, rallying supporters against Biden, Dr. Anthony Fauci, news media, Silicon Valley and more. “I’ve only begun to fight in the State of Florida!” DeSantis exclaimed to a cheering West Palm Beach crowd. DeSantis blasted Fauci and Silicon Valley’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. Big Tech, he argued, is censoring the truth about the Wuhan Institute of Virology. DeSantis also bashed Fauci over reports detailing the mistreatment of puppies during experiments funded by the infectious disease doctor. In one instance, a Fauci-led agency funded research allowing scientists to force-feed experimental drugs into 44 beagle puppies before killing and dissecting them.
“DeSantis embraces ‘Let’s Go, Brandon’ chant meant as a vulgar insult of Biden” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — DeSantis embraced a viral chant meant as a vulgar insult of Biden and had a protester tossed out during an official event that turned into a campaign rally at the West Palm Beach airport Wednesday. At an event to announce his desire for more election law changes, DeSantis referred to Biden as “Brandon,” a reference to the viral “Let’s Go, Brandon” chant popularized in conservative media. The chant is code for “F*** Joe Biden,” and stems from a reporter at a NASCAR event saying during a TV interview with driver Brandon Brown that the “F*** Joe Biden” chant heard in the background was the crowd saying, “Let’s Go, Brandon.”
Happening tonight:
“Democrat Tahitiana Muñoz-Chaffin challenging Fred Hawkins in HD 42” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Muñoz-Chaffin, a St. Cloud real estate agent with a background in law enforcement, is challenging Republican Rep. Hawkins in House District 42. Muñoz-Chaffin ran unsuccessfully last year for the Osceola County Commission. In many ways her new quest for HD 42 is a continuation of that effort, pursuing what she said are critical needs for infrastructure resources throughout the district, from road expansions to water quality, as well as commitments to affordable housing and emergency services support. Hawkins represented Osceola County Commission District 5 before he was elected in 2020 to represent HD 42.
“Palm Beach County seeks to create a Hispanic-majority Commission district” via Hannah Morse of the Palm Beach Post — A Hispanic-majority County Commission district is just on the horizon in Palm Beach County. After deliberating over two proposed draft maps to redraw the boundaries of the county’s seven districts on Tuesday, Commissioners signaled support for a map that may see the population of District 3, currently represented by Mayor Dave Kerner, become 50.21% Hispanic. In this proposal, all the Commission districts will geographically stretch in some places and contract in others. But the ones set to go through likely the biggest transformations are Districts 2 and 3, the former’s seat held by Commissioner Gregg Weiss.
— CORONA NATION —
“Why was the COVID-19 death toll so high at some veterans’ homes?” via Tiffany Stanley of The Washington Post — Across the country, state veterans’ homes were among the most dangerous long-term-care facilities during the pandemic. More than 145 veterans died in two homes in New Jersey. One hundred and twenty-one at a New York home. Dozens more in Hawaii, Illinois and Oklahoma. Seventy-six veterans died in one Massachusetts facility, where two officials were later indicted on still-pending charges of criminal neglect. The country’s 160 state veterans’ homes are not run by the Department of Veterans Affairs, despite the fact that they are the largest institutional long-term-care provider for veterans.
“Did COVID-19 change how we dream?” via Brooke Jarvis of The New York Times — Analysis of the dreams that followed the Sept. 11 attacks found that the aftermath affected Dreamers differently. First responders and survivors often dreamed realistic versions of the trauma they had experienced, but even people who had merely watched the attacks on television experienced a surge of anxiety dreams and nightmares. As the novel coronavirus spread, the first thing almost every dream researcher noticed was that for many people, their dream worlds seemed suddenly larger and more intense. One study of more than 1,000 Italians living through strict lockdown found that some 60% were sleeping badly — pre-pandemic, only a third of Italians reported trouble sleeping — and they were also remembering more of their dreams than during normal times and reporting that those dreams felt unusually real, emotional, and bizarre.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Fed dials back bond purchases; plots end to stimulus by June” via Nick Timiraos of The Wall Street Journal — The Federal Reserve closed a chapter on its aggressive, pandemic-driven stimulus when it approved plans Wednesday to begin scaling back its bond-buying program this month amid concerns that inflationary pressures could last longer than officials expected earlier this year. Fed officials agreed to wind down their $120-billion-a-month asset-purchase program by $15 billion each in November and December, a pace that could phase out the purchases entirely by next June. Fed Chair Jerome Powell said officials had pulled forward, relative to market expectations earlier this year, the potential end-date for the bond-buying program in case they decide they need to raise interest rates next year to cool down the economy if inflationary pressures broaden.
“October consumer sentiment tumbles signaling a continued slow economic recovery” via Perry Liebovitz of UF News — Consumer sentiment among Floridians dropped for a third consecutive month in October to 71.3, down 3.6 points from a revised figure of 74.9 in September and down 5 points from the pandemic low recorded in April 2020. All five components that make up the index declined. Floridians’ opinions about their personal finances now compared with a year ago decreased one point from 71.4 to 70.4. Opinions were split by demographics with women, people older than 60, and people with annual income under $50,000 reporting more-favorable opinions to the former component and people with annual income under $50,000 expressing slightly more optimistic views to the latter.
“American Airlines’ cancellations are a window into why people are so upset with the economy” via Helaine Olen of The Washington Post — While many on Twitter spent the past weekend calling for the firing of a Southwest Airlines pilot who allegedly broadcast the anti-Biden meme “Let’s go Brandon” over his plane’s speaker system, far fewer commented on the full-on consumer catastrophe unfolding at another carrier. American Airlines canceled more than 2,000 flights beginning Friday. Would-be flyers reported missing funerals and vacations, not to mention running up unexpected hotel bills. Skimpflation is a hotel that no longer offers daily housekeeping. It’s also the bank that doesn’t employ enough phone operators. Or it’s the airline, such as American, that can’t hire back workers fast enough post-COVID-19 slow down, so a weather issue in a hub city throws the lives of thousands of people into chaos.
“In a ‘workers economy,’ who really holds the cards?” via Emma Goldberg of The New York Times — With the country’s labor force down by more than 4 million people and resignations at a high, employers are desperate to make hires. In August, one in 14 hospitality workers quit their jobs, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, a quit rate more than 50% higher than before the pandemic. Flush with options and frustrated after laboring through lockdowns, workers are feeling a sense of possibility. Some are resigning. Some are waiting for a prime gig. Others are flexing their muscles — requesting raises or remote work options — while still clocking in. Employers note the jump in demands, and in some cases catering to it, during a power shift they realize may be long-lasting.
“When bonuses and raises aren’t enough, try manicures and free clothes” via Suzanne Kapner and Chip Cutter of The Wall Street Journal — David’s Bridal tried the usual methods to recruit and retain workers in a tight labor market, including raising wages and offering cash bonuses for referrals. Then the wedding dress retailer decided on a different approach: inviting employees to model in its advertising. Companies across industries are dangling new incentives to counteract a labor shortage that has made it harder for U.S. employers to find and hold on to workers. JBS USA Holdings is helping to build homes for employees to buy. Levi Strauss is offering free computer coding classes. Target, Walmart and Amazon are offering to help pay for college. Staffers at Chicago technology firm project44 can use a company-subsidized van — complete with a bed, a toilet and shower, and Wi-Fi — so they can combine work with family road trips.
‘‘Don’t buy Zillow Homes’: A tale of failure, mistrust and hot housing markets” via Claire Ballentine and Charlie Wells of Bloomberg — It has been a tumultuous few days for the real estate company. On Tuesday, the firm announced it would shut down its much-vaunted house-flipping arm and cut its workforce by 25%. Voyeuristic Zillow usage surged during the pandemic. So-called Zillow Surfing became such a trend that Saturday Night Live mocked Americans’ obsession with looking at other people’s properties in a February skit simply called “Zillow.” But such surfers may have started to perceive a dark side beneath the slick app, as many fans of digital platforms ranging from Facebook to TikTok also have of late. Home prices in the U.S. have been surging, fueling unease about the role large companies — particularly those like Zillow with access to reams of browsing data — might have on the housing market.
“Butterball CEO: Small turkeys for Thanksgiving will be harder to find” via Talia Kaplan of Fox 13 — Butterball CEO Jay Jandrain said Thanksgiving turkeys will be harder to find this year and also noted that it’s “reasonable to expect” higher prices amid supply chain issues. Jandrain said that “we don’t expect there to be a shortage overall, but we do see there will be fewer small turkeys this year.” He recommended that consumers “go out to the stores and get them as early as you can.” Supermarkets started purchasing turkeys, spices, and cranberry sauce early this year, noting that the goal was to avoid shortages that left some store shelves empty last year.
— MORE CORONA —
“COVID-19 cases rise in Europe for 5th consecutive week” via The Associated Press — The number of coronavirus cases has risen in Europe for the fifth consecutive week, making it the only world region where COVID-19 is still increasing, the World Health Organization reported Wednesday. In its weekly report on the pandemic, the U.N. health agency said new cases jumped by 6% in Europe compared to an 18% increase the previous week. According to the report, the weekly number of new infections in other regions either fell or remained about the same. The sharpest drop was seen in the Middle East, where new cases decreased by 12%. Overall, 3 million new weekly cases were reported globally, the report states. The number of deaths from COVID-19 worldwide rose by 8%, driven mainly by Southeast Asia, where deaths spiked by 50%.
“The WHO grants Covaxin, a COVID-19 vaccine developed in India, emergency authorization.” via Sameer Yasir and Hari Kumar of The New York Times — The World Health Organization on Wednesday granted emergency authorization to Covaxin, the first coronavirus vaccine developed in India and to get the designation, providing a major boost for Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has stressed his intention of making the country’s pandemic prevention effort self-reliant. The vaccine was developed by Bharat Biotech, an Indian drug company, and the Indian Council of Medical Research, a government body, and is the eighth coronavirus vaccine to receive the global health body’s green light. The WHO said Covaxin had a 78% efficacy against COVID-19 and should be administered in two doses four weeks apart to adults, noting that the vaccine’s easier storage requirements might be convenient for poor and developing countries.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden administration orders federal agencies to fix hundreds of cyber flaws” via Dustin Volz of The Wall Street Journal — The Biden administration on Wednesday issued a sweeping new order mandating that nearly all federal agencies patch hundreds of cybersecurity vulnerabilities that are considered significant risks for damaging intrusions into government computer systems. The new requirement is one of the most wide-reaching cybersecurity mandates ever imposed on the federal government. It covers about 200 known security flaws identified by cybersecurity professionals between 2017 and 2020 and an additional 90 discovered in 2021 alone that have generally been observed being used by malicious hackers. Those flaws were listed in a new federal catalog as carrying “significant risk to the federal enterprise.” The directive applies to all executive branch departments and agencies except for the Defense Department, CIA, and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
“The U.S. blacklists the NSO Group, an Israeli spyware firm.” via Ana Swanson of The New York Times — The Biden administration blacklisted the NSO Group, an Israeli cyber-surveillance company, on Wednesday, saying that the company had supplied spyware that was used by foreign governments to “maliciously target” government officials, businesspeople, academics and journalists. The company makes a sophisticated surveillance system known as Pegasus, which has been under scrutiny for years for its ability to stealthily extract sound recordings, photos, contacts, text messages, and other information from targeted smartphones. In July, a consortium of media outlets reported that the app had been used extensively to hack smartphones owned by journalists. “Our technologies support U.S. national security interests and policies by preventing terrorism and crime, and thus we will advocate for this decision to be reversed,” NSO said in a statement.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“How Chuck Schumer’s left turn shaped the Democratic agenda and set up a chaotic final scramble over Biden proposals” via Mike DeBonis of The Washington Post — As the coronavirus pandemic began to ravage the United States in the spring of 2020, Sen. Schumer gathered some leading liberal economists to meet virtually with top Senate Democratic leaders and staffers to think through the federal government’s response. That posture represented an unmistakable evolution for Schumer, who spent years advocating for modest, poll-tested policies. Schumer has firmly cast his lot with a growing liberal bloc in his caucus that is increasingly comfortable with a more muscular federal government and the higher taxes and spending needed to underpin it.
“Janet Yellen says the U.S. will help raise $500 million for green bonds.” via Lisa Friedman and Eshe Nelson of The New York Times — Treasury Secretary Yellen said the United States would support a financing mechanism that aims to direct $500 million a year to move developing countries away from coal-based energy and toward wind, solar and other low- and zero-carbon energy sources. Speaking at the United Nations climate talks in Glasgow, Yellen acknowledged that while wealthy countries have promised billions of dollars to tackle climate change, the real cost is in the trillions. “I agree we all must do more, and the United States is stepping up,” Yellen said. But, she added, “the gap between what governments have and what the world needs is large, and the private sector needs to play a bigger role.”
“Senate Republicans block debate on a third major voting rights bill” via Mike DeBonis of The Washington Post — Wednesday’s vote on the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act — named after the civil rights icon and former congressman who died last year — fell short of the 60 votes necessary to proceed, 51-49. Only one Republican, Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, voted to advance it. After the vote, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer accused the Senate GOP of “implicitly endorsing these partisan Republican actions to suppress the vote and unravel our democracy” and pivoted to attacking the filibuster, the 60-vote supermajority rule that allowed the minority to prevail. “Anyone who has been here for more than a few years knows, the gears of Senate have ossified,” he said.
“Hispanic Democrats warn of the perils of dropping immigration proposals from Biden’s domestic spending bill” via Marianna Sotomayor and Maria Sacchetti of The Washington Post — Democrats who have been frustrated by the lack of progress on making sweeping changes to the immigration system are warning party leaders that Congress needs to include something in Biden’s signature domestic policy package for the immigrant communities it has promised to help and is counting on to show up in big numbers in the 2022 midterm elections. What should be included continues to be a subject of intense debate because of a complicating set of factors that include what policies would comply with the Senate rules governing the bill and the reluctance of vulnerable Democrats to endorse anything they worry Republicans will attack them for on the campaign trail.
“Mike Waltz, Stephanie Murphy seek to double Customs enforcement reach offshore” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — The Coast Guard only intercepts a 10th of the criminal activity it spots in waters off Florida’s coast. U.S. Reps. Waltz and Murphy hope a change in the nautical reach of Customs and Border Patrol will provide needed support. The Florida Congress members introduced bipartisan legislation that could double the contiguous zone defining law enforcement reach into U.S. waters. That would mean Customs enforcement could operate its air and marine operations 24 nautical miles from shore, instead of the 12-nautical-mile limit currently in place. “Right now, a real issue is that through radar and other types of surveillance assets we have, we know we are intercepting just a fraction of what we see coming in,” said Waltz.
“Lois Frankel presses Army Corps to delay Lake O decision, Commander ‘confident’ in December timeline” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Frankel pushed for additional delays to the Army Corps’ new Lake Okeechobee regulation plan Wednesday as delegation members met in Washington, D.C., to discuss Florida water issues. Col. James Booth, who recently began serving as commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Jacksonville District, said the Lake Okeechobee Systems Operation Manual (LOSOM) will be complete by December despite a recent holdup. But Frankel raised additional concerns. That echoes concerns from other regions in the state as the Army Corps works on the new framework, which will govern, in part, where and how often water is distributed from Lake Okeechobee.
“Debbie Wasserman Schultz urges Army Corps to use infrastructure funding on Everglades projects” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — With Democrats still holding last-minute talks to approve Bidens infrastructure package, Rep. Wasserman Schultz says she hopes up to $5 billion will be available for Everglades restoration projects. Wasserman Schultz chaired a Wednesday meeting of the Florida congressional delegation where Col. James Booth, commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Jacksonville District, was on hand to testify. Wasserman Schultz asked whether the Corps has discussed how new funds would be allocated and whether Everglades restoration projects would be prioritized. But Booth demurred, arguing that would be a decision for top Army Corps leadership. “I haven’t been involved in those discussions at the headquarters level on how they’re doing the allocations,” Booth said.
— CRISIS —
“At least seven Jan. 6 rallygoers won public office on Election Day” via Amy B. Wang and Mariana Alfaro of The Washington Post — BuzzFeed News first reported last week that at least 13 Republicans who traveled to Washington on Jan. 6 to protest the results of the 2020 election were running for office this year. On Tuesday, three of those 13 Republicans — Dave LaRock, John McGuire and Marie March — were elected to the Virginia House of Delegates. According to HuffPost, other Jan. 6 rallygoers who won elected office Tuesday include Christine Ead for the Watchung, New Jersey, City Council; Natalie Jangula for the City Council in Nampa, Idaho; Matthew Lynch for the local school committee in Braintree, Massachusetts; and Susan Soloway for reelection to the board of directors in Hunterdon County, New Jersey.
“DOJ seeks toughest Jan. 6 sentence yet for ex-MMA fighter who punched cop” via Kyle Cheney of POLITICO — Federal prosecutors are seeking their stiffest sentence yet in a case stemming from the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, recommending 44 months in jail for Scott Fairlamb, a former MMA fighter filmed punching a police officer in the head after breaching the building. Fairlamb, a Trump supporter and brother of a Secret Service agent, pleaded guilty in August to two charges: obstructing Congress’ effort to certify the 2020 election and assaulting a police officer. He’s the first of more than 100 defendants charged with assaulting and impeding police officers to face sentencing, and his case is likely to become a benchmark for the others.
“Top Trump allies set up a ‘legal fund’ for Jan. 6 White House rally organizers” via Hunter Walker of Rolling Stone — According to multiple sources, Matt and Mercedes Schlapp have created a legal fund to pay for the defense of several people who have been subpoenaed by the House Jan. 6 select committee. The money would pay for counsel from the law firm of former acting attorney general Matt Whitaker. The fund will not help the hundreds of Trump supporters who have been charged with storming the building. The Schlapps and Whitaker are highly connected in elite Republican circles. Mercedes Schlapp served as director of strategic communications in Trump’s White House. Matt, her husband, is chair of the highly influential Conservative Political Action Coalition. Whitaker was acting Attorney General for just over three months, from November 2018 until February of the following year.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Trump campaign payments for ‘command centers’ at D.C. hotels could undermine executive privilege claim in Jan. 6 investigation” via Jacqueline Alemany, Josh Dawsey, Emma Brown and Tom Hamburger of The Washington Post — It was a month after the 2020 presidential election, and Bernard Kerik was starting to panic. The former New York City police chief and his friend Rudolph Giuliani were shelling out thousands of dollars for hotel rooms and travel in their effort to find evidence of voting fraud and persuade state legislators to overturn Biden’s victory. Yet Trump’s campaign had turned down Kerik’s request for a campaign credit card. The bills went unpaid until after Fox News personality Jeanine Pirro went to bat on their behalf. Soon after, the campaign cut Kerik a check with Trump’s approval.
“Trump and Republicans haven’t made a peep about voter fraud in Virginia since Glenn Youngkin won” via Eliza Relman and Sonam Sheth of Business Insider — On Monday, Trump said he was “not a believer in the integrity of Virginia’s elections.” The next day, he took credit for Republican Gov.-elect Youngkin’s win in the state. Following Trump’s lead, other Republicans and conservative pundits abandoned their claims that Democrats would steal the election immediately after Youngkin became the first Republican to win a Virginia gubernatorial election in over a decade. Trump credited himself and “MAGA voters” with delivering Youngkin a victory in Virginia, despite repeatedly suggesting that the election would be marred by fraud and abuse. “It is looking like Terry McAuliffe’s campaign against a certain person named ‘Trump’ has very much helped Glenn Youngkin,” he said in an email Tuesday night. “All McAuliffe did was talk Trump, Trump, Trump and he lost.”
“A new anti-Trump defamation suit shows one way forward against the Big Lie” via Jeremy Stahl of Slate — A lawsuit filed in a Philadelphia-based county court by James Savage, the Delaware County Voting Machine warehouse supervisor, alleges Trump, Giuliani and others they defamed him by suggesting he had personally added votes to Biden’s tally. Savage says that he has lost job prospects, his reputation in his community has suffered, he’s been personally accosted in the street, he and his family have received death threats, and he has suffered two heart attacks due to the Trump team’s fraudulent allegations. This newest suit follows similar lawsuits by voting companies Dominion and Smartmatic and at least one Dominion employee. It is further evidence that defamation law is beginning to play an outsized role in confronting the Big Lie.
“NRA ran shell companies to illegally fund Trump and other Republicans, Giffords group alleges in suit” via Timothy Bella of The Washington Post — A gun-control nonprofit founded by former Democratic U.S. Rep. Gabby Giffords filed a federal lawsuit against the National Rifle Association on Tuesday, alleging the group orchestrated an illegal, secret donation scheme involving millions of dollars that violated campaign finance laws and benefited then-candidate Trump and other Republicans. The nonprofit, called Giffords, alleges the shell companies affiliated with the NRA illegally coordinated with Republican campaigns to use the same personnel and vendors to run ads for GOP candidates, claiming the vendors were “functionally indistinguishable.” Campaign finance laws state that such a practice is illegal. The complaint came after a federal judge granted Giffords’s nonprofit the right to sue the NRA when the Federal Election Commission failed to act on previous complaints.
— STATEWIDE —
“2021 hurricane season uses up name list for only third time in history but is it over?” via Kimberly Miller of the Palm Beach Post — The 2021 hurricane season will go down in history for its tropical fecundity, exhausting the storm names list for only the third time on record before easing into a sluggish finish. Wanda’s formation 1,000 miles west of the Azores on Halloween eve put this year in third place for cyclonic quantity behind the 30 named storms of 2020 and 2005’s 28 named storms. It also broke a storm drought that began Oct. 5 when Sam turned post-tropical, ending an extended period of Atlantic basin quiescence not experienced during October since 2007.
“Cuban migrant landings continue in the Keys. This time, five people made it on a raft” via Gwen Filosa of the Miami Herald — Cuban migrants continue to reach the Keys by sea, despite the danger of using makeshift boats across the Florida Straits coupled with the strong likelihood that if they make it to land, they will be sent back. Early Tuesday morning, five Cubans on a homemade raft landed in Key West, the U.S. Border Patrol said. The group arrived by the Southernmost Point marker, the tourist landmark that resembles a giant buoy at Whitehead and South streets. They said they left Artemisa, Cuba, the day before, said Border Patrol spokesman Adam Hoffner. “Members of the group were interviewed and processed for removal proceedings,” Hoffner said in an email.
“Brightline wants another $1 billion in financing for Miami to Orlando” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Brightline is getting ready to ask for state and federal permission to raise another $1 billion through tax-exempt, private activity bonds to finish and improve its Miami to Orlando high-speed passenger train route now under construction. Buried within line-item details of the proposal, as outlined Wednesday by Swiatek and Brightline Holdings Chief Executive Officer Mike Reininger, was a small allocation, $20 million, to plan the company’s next big venture, a proposed high-speed rail line connecting Orlando International Airport to Tampa.
“Manatee released into Martin County waters brings hope during a tough year for Florida icon” via Max Chesnes of Treasure Coast Newspapers — Hope comes in many forms. On Wednesday, hope was a rotund 735-pound manatee, swimming her way home after more than five months of recovery. “Sheep,” an 8-foot-long young adult female manatee, was released into Frazier Creek, a tributary of the St. Lucie River in Stuart. In May, she was rescued after a boat collision in Martin County left her weak and floating on her side. After being reported May 12 to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, the manatee was relocated 110 miles south to Miami Seaquarium, where she’s spent the last half-year growing strength, adding fat to her frame and regaining her energy.
“A surge of snowbirds arrives as South Florida’s peak season builds” via David Lyons and Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A strong winter season appears to be building in South Florida as snowbirds gear up to travel again, hotels report strong bookings and the region’s events scene regains traction after being sidetracked by COVID-19. The indicators are already present, with would-be visitors declaring their intentions to travel and businesses reporting upticks in patrons. Discover The Palm Beaches Florida, the tourism promotion arm for Palm Beach County, said Tuesday that it anticipates travel demand “to increase significantly,” breaking records in Jan. through March of next year. “With international borders reopening later this month, we expect to see a surge from our key international markets, specifically from Canada,” the agency said.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Daughter of Broward congressional candidate pleads guilty to COVID-19 relief fraud” via Jay Weaver of the Miami Herald — One day after her father appeared to be winning a Democratic primary race for Congress, Broward County political consultant Damara Holness pleaded guilty Wednesday to stealing $300,000 from a federal government program designed to aid small businesses hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic. Holness is the 28-year-old daughter of Broward Commissioner Holness, who was narrowly leading the Democratic field to fill the late Hastings’ vacant seat after Tuesday’s special primary and may now face the Republican winner. Damara Holness was charged with one count of conspiring to commit wire fraud in August. As part of her guilty plea to that charge, she admitted lying about the financial needs of her Plantation consulting business to qualify for a federal PPP loan guaranteed by the SBA as part of Congress’ massive pandemic relief package.
“Miami-Dade hires former Alonzo Mourning charity director to run Black prosperity office” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — Miami-Dade County commissioners hired William Diggs, a veteran nonprofit executive who once ran Mourning’s foundation, to take over the county agency charged with promoting prosperity among Black residents and businesses. Diggs takes over the Miami-Dade Economic Advocacy Trust after the summer retirement of longtime director John Dixon. The Diggs appointment by a unanimous commission vote Tuesday places a well-known fundraiser in Miami-Dade’s Black philanthropic circles in charge of a county agency sometimes criticized as underutilized in promoting Black prosperity. A former director of the Miami-Dade Chamber of Commerce, an association of Black-owned businesses, Diggs also ran the Mourning Family Foundation, raising $12 million for the former Miami Heat star’s community charity.
“Jupiter OKs $160K severance package for Town Manager after ouster. Here’s what’s next.” via Katherine Kokal of the Palm Beach Post — The Town Council has approved a $160,000 severance package for Jupiter Town Manager Matt Benoit, who resigned last week after town police officers and two former staff members went public with complaints of him creating “a hostile environment” for employees. Benoit’s last day will be Monday. An interim Manager will then lead the town’s 357 employees until a permanent one is hired. The process could take between six and nine months, Town Attorney Thomas Baird said. Town Council members agreed Tuesday to meet at 6 p.m. Monday to make the appointment and discuss how to search for a new permanent manager.
“Appeals court upholds firing of principal who wouldn’t say Holocaust was a fact” via Andrew Marra of the Palm Beach Post — A principal fired after refusing to say the Holocaust was a historical fact has lost an appeal to win back his job. Wednesday, a state appeals court rejected former Spanish River High School Principal William Latson’s challenge to the Palm Beach County School Board’s decision to terminate him over his explosive remarks last year. The decision brings the two-year legal battle over Latson’s employment closer to an end, though the former principal can still appeal to the Florida Supreme Court. The administrator was first ousted in October 2019 after telling a parent via email he “can’t say the Holocaust is a factual, historical event because I am not in a position to do so as a school district employee.”
“Not so fast. Commission wants to vote on controversial Fort Lauderdale condo; critics say it’s too tall for historic neighborhood.” via Susannah Bryan of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A controversial condo tower proposed on the edge of one of Fort Lauderdale’s oldest neighborhoods will face an unexpected hurdle next month: A Commission vote. The $60 million project, a sleek tower slated for a half-acre parcel east of downtown along the New River, had already sailed through required approvals from other city boards. Foes complain the 77-unit tower is too tall, at nearly 140 feet, and will ruin Colee Hammock’s quaint neighborhood charm. Advocates — including Ben Sorensen, the neighborhood’s Commissioner — note the project meets zoning requirements. Those opposed to the plan gained a glimmer of hope late Tuesday when commissioners voted 3-2 to hold a hearing on the proposal on Dec. 7.
“SpaceX recovery engineer fired for ‘inappropriate faces’ claims racial discrimination” via Gabrielle Russon of Florida Politics — As a SpaceX engineer, Ajay Reddy worked in the recovery program of using ships with big nets stretched above them to capture large pieces falling from rockets. Recovering “fairings” to be reused for the next rocket launch saved SpaceX millions of dollars. Reddy’s career at the aerospace manufacturer lasted seven months. The former fairing recovery engineer said he was wrongfully fired in May 2020. Reddy sued SpaceX, accusing the company of racial discrimination, paying him less, and treating him like a scapegoat because he is an Asian American of Indian descent, according to court documents filed in U.S. District Court’s Orlando division. The company’s excuse was that he made inappropriate facial expressions during a group interview event, which Reddy denies.
“Miami-Dade brain trust to examine in-city flying cars, cargo in ‘Urban Air Mobility System’” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Once solely an aspect of science fiction, the prospect of flying cars zipping across city skylines is close to actualization, experts say. When that day comes, Miami-Dade County plans on being ready. On Tuesday, Miami-Dade Commissioners directed Mayor Daniella Levine Cava’s administration to create a working group focused on developing an implementation plan for an “Urban Air Mobility System.” Due in 120 days, the plan is to accommodate in-city airborne emergency services, traffic monitoring and management, public safety, cargo, and, yes, individual passenger travel and public transport within the county’s boundaries. An Urban Air Mobility System, or UAM, isn’t expected tomorrow. But it could be here by 2026.
“Oceanfront Key West Margaritaville resort is opening soon — and now you can book a room” via Connie Ogle of FL Keys News — The new Margaritaville Beach House Key West is now accepting reservations in advance of its official opening. Located on Smathers Beach, the oceanfront hotel is currently operating as Barbary Beach House Key West, but on Nov. 15, guests will find a rebranded and upgraded resort with family-friendly amenities and new places to eat and drink. “Key West is the perfect location for our new Margaritaville destination, providing guests with a relaxing oasis to escape, unwind, and enjoy the laid-back lifestyle,” said general manager Jeremy DaSilva. The new hotel features 186 suites, plus a lagoon-style pool with entertainment and lawn games. Find a hammock and take a nap or hit the 24-hour fitness center. Or do what every tourist wants to do: Head to the beach for sun and sand.
— TOP OPINION —
“An abnormal Republican Party was treated normally by voters in New Jersey and Virginia” via Perry Bacon Jr. of The Washington Post — Some voters may have switched from Biden to Youngkin, but it’s unlikely the huge McAuliffe shortfall in Fairfax was just about switching. Instead, it’s clear that lots of the people who voted for Biden did not participate in this election, while a smaller percentage of Trump voters sat out. Even though Youngkin isn’t as bad as Trump, he has nonetheless flirted with some of the worst of Trumpism, at one point refusing to acknowledge Biden won the election and throughout the election casting critical race theory as a threat. It would have been great if Virginia decisively rebuked a candidate who traffics in even small amounts of Trumpism. Perhaps that will come in 2022.
— OPINIONS —
“So what happens to Florida’s economy when low-wage workers can no longer afford to live there?” via Lizette Alvarez of The Washington Post — Florida’s affordable-housing problem, long shrugged off during the building boom of the 1990s and later the run-up to Great Recession, is now a full-blown crisis. Without workers, Florida’s tourism and service industries — in other words, its economy — will falter if people have to move elsewhere. The state’s relatively low wages simply can’t keep pace with the staggering jump in prices. Without government involvement, building sufficient affordable housing is a pipe dream. Developers are not going to forgo more lucrative options simply out of a sense of public spirit. But financial incentives, such as changes in zoning and land-use laws to encourage rehabbing existing buildings or constructing mixed-use housing, can induce some of them to build.
“The kids can handle America’s real history. Why can’t adults?” via Leonard Pitts Jr. of the Tampa Bay Times — Maybe White students deserve more credit than they get. Maybe — apologies to The Who — the kids are all right. Kids are the one group that’s been largely missing from the nation’s rancorous and ongoing debate over the teaching of African American history. We’ve heard ad nauseam from lawmakers who say the subject must be banned because it makes white kids, yes, “uncomfortable.” And from parents who say it makes them ask painful questions. But we haven’t heard from the kids themselves. According to educator Leo Glaze, it’s not really because they’re too young. Rather, it’s because their elders themselves don’t know how to process America’s history of genocide, land theft, enslavement, rape, oppression and assault.
“UF needs a new mascot. Ditch the Gator. Try the Lapdog.” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — It took the school 160 years to crack the top rankings among national universities — and about two weeks to totally tarnish that reputation. Now, alumni are not only questioning their donations; an accrediting board is investigating accusations that the university tried to ban professors from lending their expertise to a voting-rights case that might tick off the Governor and GOP legislators. That came on the heels of emails that revealed the school fast-tracked the hiring of a fringy, vaccine-questioning doctor from California whom DeSantis wanted as the state’s new Surgeon General. UF is looking less like a premier institution of higher learning and more like a pawn for political power brokers in Tallahassee.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Gov. DeSantis — who has praised Florida’s electoral process — is now calling for an elections police force to investigate fraud.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— A highlight of Election Day; Ken Welch is the new Mayor of St. Petersburg.
— And Facebook’s name change to Meta signals the launch of the Metaverse and new dimensions of the digital social experience.
— Today’s Sunrise Interview visits the Metaverse! Naomi Gleit, Meta’s vice president of Product and Social Impact talks about what to expect in the Metaverse.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“‘Eternals’ star Lauren Ridloff on playing Marvel’s first deaf superhero and the need to ‘normalize subtitles’” via Adam B. Vary of Variety — Cut to Ridloff, weeping in a darkened theater — “Tears of joy! Tears of joy!” — as she watched herself converse in American Sign Language with co-stars like Angelina Jolie, Kumail Nanjiani and Salma Hayek with nary a line of dialogue wasted to explain why. Ridloff isn’t just speaking symbolically when she says “Eternals” has been life-changing. While making the movie, she expressed frustration to Jolie that a scene in which she wasn’t facing the camera meant she didn’t know when the director called “Action.” Jolie suggested having a crew member use a laser pointer to signal when the scene was starting; a practice Ridloff immediately adopted on every project she’s worked on since. “It’s actually invaluable to my work now,” she says.
“Disney World at 50: Antique carousel still makes the royal rounds” via Dewayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — The Fantasyland ride is well-traveled for something that just goes in circles. Its first home, under the name of Liberty Carrousel, was at Belle Island Park in Detroit. Then it was moved to Olympic Park in Irvington, New Jersey. That’s where it was purchased by Disney in 1967 and shipped to California before rehabbing and moving to Florida 50 years ago. Legend has it that Roy O. Disney, Walt Disney’s brother, noticed during construction that the carousel didn’t quite line up with the opening through the castle. He had it moved 8 inches to get it centered. Others say it was 2 feet. Either way, folks unhappy with the current nonalignment of Epcot’s ginormous “Harmonious” ring and Spaceship Earth and American Adventure, can point to this as precedent.
“From BTS to ‘Squid Game’: How South Korea became a cultural juggernaut” via Choe Sang-Hun of The New York Times — South Korea has long chafed at its lack of groundbreaking cultural exports. For decades, the country’s reputation was defined by its cars and cellphones from companies like Hyundai and LG, while its movies, TV shows, and music were mostly consumed by a regional audience. Now K-pop stars like Blackpink, the dystopian drama “Squid Game,” and award-winning films such as “Parasite” appear as ubiquitous as any Samsung smartphone. In the same way, South Korea borrowed from Japan and the United States to develop its manufacturing prowess, the country’s directors and producers say they have been studying Hollywood and other entertainment hubs for years, adopting and refining formulas by adding distinctly Korean touches.
“New cruise ship Celebrity Apex makes Florida debut” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — Celebrity Apex, the sister ship to the groundbreaking Celebrity Edge, arrived to Fort Lauderdale on Tuesday for its christening. The ship was originally set to debut in March 2020, but several new vessels were delayed because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The ship has already had sailings in the Mediterranean this year but now begins alternating seven-night Eastern and Western Caribbean itineraries. Sailing from Port Everglades Terminal 25, which debuted its new look in 2018, Apex brings the design concepts that first came to Florida when Celebrity Edge arrived that year. That includes the Magic Carpet, the exterior elevator platform that performs multiple roles, acting as an innovative way for passengers to disembark and reboard the ship, but also doubles as an entertainment and dining venue.
“$5M insurance payout awaits University of Florida’s Keyontae Johnson” via Mark Long of The Associated Press — A University of Florida basketball player who collapsed during a game last December is deciding whether to try and get medically cleared to play professionally or cash in a $5 million insurance policy. Two people with knowledge of Keyontae Johnson’s situation said that the senior forward’s policy went into effect in July 2020, five months before he crashed face-first onto the court at Florida State. Johnson’s policy provides him enough flexibility to take steps toward playing professionally and still reverse course and make an insurance claim, one of the people said. There’s no timetable or deadline for Johnson to decide on his future. If he doesn’t play again, Johnson has the lucrative policy to offset the loss of future earnings.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Celebrating today are lobbyists Robert Beck Rep. Demi Busatta Cabrera, Carlos Cruz, Angela Dempsey, Rep. Blaise Ingoglia, Jamie Jacobs, Joe Marino and Rep. Felicia Simone Robinson. Belated wishes to Taylor Budowich.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Hello, Thursday. Diwali — a festival of lights celebrated by Hindus, Sikhs, Jains, and some Muslims and Buddhists — begins today.
- Smart Brevity™ count: 1,174 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
🧪 At 12:30 p.m. ET today, please join Axios health care editor Tina Reed for a virtual event on the future of diagnosing rare diseases. Guests include RARE-X founder and chief engagement officer Nicole Boice, and National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences acting director Joni Rutter. Register here.
Lost in the public obsession with former President Trump’s loss, grievances and threats to run again: Non-Trump Republicans have had a strong, yearlong run nationally beneath and around him.
- Why it matters: Democrats control Washington, and hold sway in most colleges and corporate suites + much of the mainstream media. But Republicans are thriving despite Trump’s tactics and antics.
Republicans kept their distance from Trump and won the governor’s mansion in Virginia — and almost won liberal New Jersey.
- They picked up a dozen House seats in 2020 when almost everyone thought they would lose a bunch.
Republicans also picked up 154 state legislative seats in 2020 to take control of two new chambers.
- These statehouse wins will help them draw districts for 2022 that could net as many as 13 seats, according to a Democratic study.
Ahead of January’s inauguration of Glenn Youngkin in Virginia, Republicans control 27 of the 50 state governor’s mansions.
- Republicans hold 54% of the nation’s state legislative seats, and control 61% of state legislatures, according to a tally by the National Conference of State Legislatures.
By the numbers: David “I’ve Seen Enough” Wasserman of Cook Political Report calculates that on Tuesday, Republican candidates for New Jersey State Senate outperformed the seats’ 2020 Biden/Trump results by a median 10.8 points.
- In races for Virginia’s House of Delegates, where Rs punctuated Youngkin’s win by taking the majority, the GOP topped 2020 by a median 12.4 points.
Here’s how big that is: “[I]f Republicans were to outperform the 2020 Biden/Trump margin by 10.8 points (New Jersey) in all 435 House seats in 2022, they would pick up 44 House seats for a 257R-178D majority,” Wasserman writes.
- “If they were to outperform by 12.3 points (Virginia), they would pick up a mammoth 51 seats for a 261R-174D split.”
The bottom line: While Trump himself lost in 2020, he grew his total vote and share of Black men and Hispanics. Republicans are expanding those gains.
A rally against critical race theory at the Loudoun County Government Center in Leesburg, Va., in June. Photo: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images
A new PAC focused on electing conservative candidates to public school boards — by raising fears about how race is taught — won three-fourths of 58 races across seven states on Tuesday, Axios’ Stef Kight reports.
- Why it matters: The wins for the 1776 Project PAC underscore the potency of culture wars and COVID issues in schools — and how GOP candidates are seeking to ride the trend.
Reality check: School officials are concerned there’s been intense hype and misinformation about what’s being taught in most schools.
By the numbers: 13 Pennsylvania school board candidates backed by the group won their races, plus 11 in Colorado … nine in Kansas … four in New Jersey … three in Virginia … and two each in Ohio and Minnesota.
- They’re not just winning in Republican areas. Several candidates won in solid-blue counties: Montgomery County, Pa. … Passaic County, N.J. … and Johnson County, Kansas.
Axios energy reporter Ben Geman reports from the climate summit in Scotland … Last evening I talked my way into the stunning (and currently closed to the public) Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, where a finance-industry climate coalition was holding an invite-only reception.
- I was soon politely kicked out. The glimpse was a reminder that COP26 is many things at once: closed-door negotiations, wonky discussion, stage-managed announcements — and street protests.
Want substance? Stroll through the packed hall of side events and get your wonk on — countless panel discussions like “Clean energy transition in the Western Balkans” or 90 minutes (!) on “Integrating resilience into investment decision-making.”
- U.S. climate envoy John Kerry is simply everywhere. At 6’4”, the lanky Kerry is easy to spot, shuttling between meetings in his frenzied, late-career push.
Nearby is Hollywood star-power: A crush of photographers awaited Leo DiCaprio as he headed into an event on cutting methane emissions.
- The big hall with country and organization pavilions included, in the case low-lying island nation of Tuvalu, an art installation depicting polar bears wearing life jackets.
It took an extra 20 hours, but the alert came at 6:26 p.m. Wednesday:
- TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy narrowly wins reelection, sparing Democrats the loss of a 2nd gubernatorial seat.
Murphy eked out an agonizing 50%-49% victory over GOP challenger Jack Ciattarelli, who campaigned on taxes + opposition to mask and vax mandates, AP reports.
- Murphy, in a brief victory speech last night, said he’ll “listen to all of New Jersey.” But he emphasized Democratic goals, including voting and abortion rights, and raising taxes on the wealthy.
Minneapolis officers, seen through a chain-link gate. Photo: Stephen Maturen/Getty Images
A top police union says cities and states are unlikely to see many new “defund the police” proposals, after Minneapolis voters rejected a measure to overhaul the police department, Axios’ Russell Contreras reports.
- “I believe, by and large, that ship has sailed,” said Jim Pasco, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police, a national police organization that represents 356,000 officers.
The big picture: The rejection of the massive change in the city where George Floyd was murdered by a police officer came as Republicans made gains and amid rising crime.
- The results suggest shifting sentiments about how dramatically to reform policing, a year and a half after demonstrators demanded an end to systemic racism in policing, media and politics.
New COVID infections fell by about 20% nationwide over the past two weeks, though parts of the West and Midwest are seeing their caseloads tick higher, Axios’ Sam Baker and Will Chase report.
Broadcast video (left) compared to animated rendering. Courtesy: SportLogiq
Researchers examining unconscious bias in sports produced two-dimensional renderings to determine what soccer looks like when you can’t see who’s playing, Axios Sports editor Kendall Baker writes.
- Why it matters: Sports commentary is riddled with stereotypes, with white players often praised for their “work ethic” and Black players reduced to their physical abilities.
The results: Of the 47 study participants who watched a two-minute clip of Senegal vs. Poland at the 2018 World Cup, 70% said that Senegal was “more athletic or quick,” a common stereotype of Black players.
- But of the 58 others who saw a rendering of the same two minutes without knowing which teams were playing, 62% picked Poland, whose players were all white.
This is a yearbook page from Norfolk Academy, where Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin — 6’7″ — was a member of the class of ’85.
- The caption: “The ‘Yunkmaster,’ alias Glenn Youngkin, does it again.” (tip-in: Danielle Jones)
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Morning Headlines
House Democratic leaders unveiled their latest compromise proposal on state and local tax deductions Wednesday as part of their updated 2,135-page reconciliation package, but once again they were running into opposition from top Senate Democrats. Read more…
OPINION — Glenn Youngkin beat Terry McAuliffe because his focus on kitchen table issues resonated with Virginia voters who liked his happy warrior style and his plans for the commonwealth: lower taxes, better schools and better jobs. He just wrote the GOP’s 2022 playbook. Read more…
The dangers of a short memory in recognizing — and fighting — hate
OPINION — If laws removing the teaching of racial truths in schools keep gaining traction, the next generation will be ignorant of what happened 100 years or one year ago. Children and the adults who mislead them will fail to learn lessons about how and why hate lingers, festers and grows. Read more…
Justices sound sour on New York concealed carry law
The Supreme Court appeared ready Wednesday to strike down New York’s regime for licensing gun owners to carry concealed weapons in public, a ruling that would for the first time expand Second Amendment rights to outside the home for self-defense. Read more…
Tony Gonzales’ road to Congress was both winding (there aren’t many high school dropouts on the Hill) and long (he put 70,000 miles on his pickup truck campaigning). He spoke with Heard on the Hill about goats, why he’d never trade in his F-150 for a Prius and how he could support policies like “Remain in Mexico.” Read more…
Congress also gridlocked on the gridiron, loses to Capitol Police
Lawmakers pulled out all the tricks Wednesday night but still couldn’t deliver on their campaign promises. Despite trick plays and pledges to defend their title, the members’ team lost to the Capitol Police, 26-6, in the Congressional Football Game. Read more…
Democrats assess blame as GOP reacts to election by expanding 2022 target list
After a bruising election night for their party in Virginia and New Jersey, Democrats in Congress debated where to place blame while the National Republican Congressional Committee expanded its list of House targets for 2022 to include members in the Old Dominion and beyond. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: For Dems, it’s ’2009 all over again’
DRIVING THE DAY
DEMOCRATS’ UGLY REALITY SETS IN — Following an embarrassing election night for Democrats, Speaker NANCY PELOSI and her caucus have redoubled their efforts to pass the bipartisan infrastructure bill (BIF) and Build Back Better package (BBB) through their chamber this week. House Majority Leader STENY HOYER announced Wednesday night that both bills could even see a floor vote as soon as today.
For now, the GOP sweep in Virginia and Dems’ razor-thin victory in New Jersey seem to have done what months of negotiations on the Hill could not: force moderates and progressives into line on passing both bills.
There’s a sense among Dems that if they just stop the bickering and get something done, they might be able to reverse what looks to be a devastating trajectory for the party heading into the midterms. Underscoring this feeling, Congressional Progressive Caucus Chair PRAMILA JAYAPAL (D-Wash.) retweeted moderate leader JOSH GOTTHEIMER (D-N.J.) saying that the message from the election was “loud and clear”: Democrats need to pass both bills ASAP. Not a pairing we see every day.
But will passing BBB and BIF help the party in 2022?
After the nationwide Democratic shellacking Tuesday, it’s fair to ask. Ahead of Election Day, some prominent Democrats warned that failure to pass President JOE BIDEN’s agenda would depress turnout among the Democratic base. Yet voters did come out in record numbers — they just said something Democrats didn’t want to hear: The party is seen as out of touch with the concerns of middle America and without a clear message on the issues that affect their lives — from inflation to empty store shelves to school closings and curricula, to name a few.
Democrats boast that their BBB proposals are popular — and polling backs them up. Yet election results across the country showed Americans think the nation is headed in the wrong direction. There’s no certainty that “delivering” on the Biden agenda will change that.
Four smart post-election reads covering this ground:
1) NYT’s Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns have a story about the Democratic Party “reeling” from the election results, including quotes from two House Democrats who were particularly candid.
— Rep. ABIGAIL SPANBERGER, a vulnerable Virginia Democrat, said Biden needs to remember that he won in 2020 first and foremost because his name was not DONALD TRUMP, and adjust his expectations accordingly: “Nobody elected him to be FDR, they elected him to be normal and stop the chaos.”
— Rep. KATHLEEN RICE (D-N.Y.) was even more blunt: “I don’t understand some of my more progressive colleagues saying [that Tuesday] night now shows us that what we need to do is get both of these bills done and shove even more progressive stuff in … What we’re talking about is not resonating with voters.”
2) Meanwhile, KEVIN MCCARTHY is gloating. The minority leader predicted Republicans could flip upward of 63 House seats, just as the GOP did during the Tea Party wave of 2010 following the passage of Obamacare, writes Anthony Adragna at Congress Minutes.
“If you’re a Democrat and President Biden won your seat by 16 points, you’re in a competitive race next year,” McCarthy said. “You are no longer safe. … It’ll be more than 70 Democrats that will be competitive.”
McCarthy isn’t the only one seeing similarities to 2009 …
3) “This is 2009 all over again,” former DCCC Chair STEVE ISRAEL told our Ally Mutnick and Elena Schneider in a piece exploring Democrats’ bleeding suburban coalition. “The only benefit they have now over 2009 is knowing just how bad it can get.
Damn.
4) WaPo’s Paul Kane analyzes why Democrats’ vow to move forward on the Biden agenda likely won’t stop the bloodbath awaiting the party in 2022. He looks not only at 2009, but also at 2017, when the shoe was on the other foot and Republicans passed a massive tax cut following losses in Virginia and New Jersey — and Democrats still flipped more than 40 House seats.
In short: Dems may be right that pressing forward with their agenda is better than the alternative — what, after all, is the point of having a majority if you aren’t going to do anything with it? — and they may well get their legislative victories any day now. But the odds are they’ll lose the House no matter what they do.
Good Thursday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
BIDEN’S THURSDAY: The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 10 a.m.
Principal deputy press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE will brief at 2 p.m.
The HOUSE will meet at 10 a.m. Pelosi will hold her weekly press conference at 10:45 a.m. She will swear in Reps.-elect SHONTEL BROWN (D-Ohio) and MIKE CAREY (R-Ohio) at 3:10 p.m.
The SENATE is in. ANTHONY FAUCI, CDC Director ROCHELLE WALENSKY and acting FDA Commissioner JANET WOODCOCK will testify before the HELP Committee at 10 a.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
ELECTION FALLOUT
VIRGINIA — What are the takeaways from GLENN YOUNGKIN’s victory? Depends on your viewpoint, of course:
— For Republicans:
- The Senate GOP is getting more comfortable with having Trump on their side, having seen how Youngkin was able to walk a tightrope with his quasi-support successfully even in a state that broke big for Biden last year, reports Burgess Everett: “Republicans are looking to Youngkin as a floor for how to deal with the former president — with [MARCO] RUBIO’s easy Trump embrace as the ceiling.”
- Olivia Beavers and Michael Stratford report that Youngkin’s emphasis on “education, stoking parental worries about progressivism in the classroom while urging them to play a greater role in schools,” has some other Republicans “taking notes on Youngkin’s blend of the standby GOP line on education — criticizing the outsized influence of teachers’ unions, backing school choice — with anti-liberal culture-war rhetoric.”
- It may be a while before we know how Latinos voted in the election: One exit poll found that Youngkin won them by a stunning 12 points, while another said they broke for TERRY MCAULIFFE by 34. Huh? Everyone wants to know how this crucial and growing bloc of voters decided, but Sabrina Rodríguez and Marc Caputo report that going over more granular data to determine the true story will take days. (That hasn’t stopped political folks from touting the early data most favorable to them.)
— For Democrats:
- A pair of op-eds for the NYT caught our attention. Former Virginia Rep. TOM PERRIELLO writes that “the fear of Trump 2.0 is not enough to win elections,” and says Dems “should be sprinting to immediately pass the boldest possible version of President Biden’s Build Back Better agenda. Democrats need to look like the party that knows how to govern and produces results that benefit Americans of every race and region.”
But another piece, by TORY GAVITO and ADAM JENTLESON, points to McAuliffe’s lack of an answer to racially coded attacks as a main culprit. Youngkin “was able to use racially coded attacks to motivate sky-high white turnout without paying a penalty among minority voters. This appears to solve the problem bedeviling Republicans in the Trump era: how to generate high turnout for a candidate who keeps Donald Trump at arm’s length. … It will not work [for Democrats] to ignore race and talk about popular issues instead.”
- Biden’s take: The president said Wednesday that Dems’ losses “underscore that the party needs to ‘produce for the American people,’ but he pushed back against the notion that the off-year election results were a repudiation of his presidency,” AP’s Colleen Long and Aamer Madhani report. He said that while Congress should have advanced the social spending package before Election Day, he’s not sure it would’ve changed the results.
NEW JERSEY — Gov. PHIL MURPHY was reelected in a squeaker, defeating Republican JACK CIATTARELLI by a razor-thin margin. (As of this morning, Murphy was up by 1.2 percentage points.)
— Matt Friedman writes that the win “breaks a decadeslong ‘curse’ in which no New Jersey Democrat had won reelection to the governorship in 44 years.”
— The Trentonian’s very N.Y. Post-esque headline on the race: “Holy Ciatt That Was Close”
— In perhaps the biggest upset of the week, New Jersey state Senate President STEPHEN SWEENEY appears to have lost reelection to EDWARD DURR, a man who “has never held public office, he has been a commercial truck driver for 25 years and he claims to have spent a whopping $153 during the primary portion of his campaign,” per NJ.com.
— STAT OF THE DAY: “Of the $153 Durr spent on his moonshot campaign, nearly half went to Dunkin’ Donuts,” via Washington Free Beacon.
CONGRESS
VOTING RIGHTS ACT GOES DOWN, via WaPo’s Mike DeBonis: “Republican senators on Wednesday voted to block debate on the third major voting rights bill that congressional Democrats have sought to pass this year in response to the state-level GOP push to restrict ballot access following former president Donald Trump’s false claims of a stolen 2020 election … Only one Republican, Sen. LISA MURKOWSKI of Alaska, voted to advance it.”
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Protect Democracy, the Project on Government Oversight and the University of Chicago Center for Effective Government are launching the Filibuster Reform Forum to “help people learn about different filibuster reform proposals with brief explanations in the same format,” with initial contributions from Molly Reynolds, Norman Ornstein, Jonathan Gould, Kenneth Shepsle, Matthew Stephenson, Mel Barnes, Norman Eisen and Sarah Binder and the opportunity for senators and scholars to contribute new proposals over time.
THE WHITE HOUSE
NOT HAPPENING — On Wednesday, Biden denied reports that his administration would send payments of $450,000 to families separated at the U.S.-Mexico border during the Trump administration.
— The backstory: On Oct. 28, WSJ reported that DOJ, DHS and HHS officials “were in talks to pay around $450,000 a person to settle lawsuits filed on behalf of the families, who say they suffered trauma from being separated in 2018 while illegally crossing the border.”
— Biden on Wednesday: “That’s not going to happen.” More from WSJ’s Aruna Viswanatha, Sadie Gurman and Andrew Restuccia
ACLU Executive Director ANTHONY ROMERO tells us “the parties continue to negotiate.”
THE PANDEMIC
A GRIM MILESTONE — On Wednesday, the number of Americans who’ve died from Covid-19 hit 750,000 — more than the total populations of Alaska, Vermont or Wyoming, note WaPo’s Marc Fisher, Lori Rozsa and Kayla Ruble.
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
THE FOG OF WAR — The Defense Department said Wednesday that surveillance videos of the Aug. 29 U.S. aerial assault in Afghanistan that killed 10 civilians “showed the presence of at least one child in the area some two minutes before the military launched a drone strike,” report NYT’s Helene Cooper and Eric Schmitt.
“The inquiry by the Air Force’s inspector general, Lt. Gen. SAMI D. SAID, found no violations of law and does not recommend any disciplinary action. … ‘Regrettably, the interpretational assessment was inaccurate.’”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
TEXAS-STYLE ABORTION LAW INTRODUCED IN OHIO — Republican lawmakers in Ohio “introduced legislation Tuesday that would ban all abortions in Ohio — going further than the Texas anti-abortion law argued before the U.S. Supreme Court Monday,” Cleveland.com’s Jeremy Pelzer reports.
GA. ELECTION OFFICIAL RESIGNS — Georgia’s Fulton County elections director RICHARD BARRON announced his resignation Wednesday “following a tumultuous year that has included death threats against him and his staff and the potential takeover of election operations in the county by state officials,” CNN’s Fredreka Schouten reports.
PLAYBOOKERS
Kamala Harris said the Democratic Party “had great wins” in Tuesday’s elections.
Dave Weigel resurfaced a photo from Terry McAuliffe’s campaign launch 11 months ago. The slogan on the podium? “Our kids. Our schools. Our future.”
Huma Abedin clarified that we’ve been pronouncing her name wrong all these years. Writes the NYT: “It is more like ‘Humma’ than ‘Hooma.’”
Eric Garcetti tested positive for the coronavirus. He was at COP26 with John Kerry earlier this week.
Kyrsten Sinema and Joe Manchin had a conversation with Mitch McConnell and John Thune on the Senate floor during which “McConnell put up air quotes and could be heard saying ‘extraordinary measures,’” per Igor Bobic.
Jamie Dimon was seen walking through the Capitol sans mask.
Eric Schmidt, the former CEO of Google, told Puck’s Teddy Schleifer that “woke-ism” will likely lead the next generation of business execs to be more timid on political issues.
Eric Adams’ wardrobe suggests a drive to be “a master of the universe, a next-gen executive, a representative of the wellness contingent and the street-smart local, all at the same time,” writes the NYT.
Lisa Desjardins of PBS NewsHour won the National Press Foundation’s Everett McKinley Dirksen Award for Distinguished Reporting of Congress for her Jan. 6 coverage.
MADE IN DC: Snap Inc. CEO Evan Spiegel revealed to the crowd at the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget’s Annual Budget Ball Reception on Tuesday that he’s literally a “product of D.C.” Daniel Lippman reports that at the start of his Q&A with CRFB President Maya MacGuineas, Spiegel said his parents met on a blind date at the Old Ebbitt Grill … and the rest is history. As for the future, he talked up augmented reality: already a couple hundred million people are engaging with it on Snapchat, he said. “Instead of reading a textbook or watching a movie about the solar system,” Spiegel said, people will be able to “walk through it.” SPOTTED: Miranda Kerr, Leon Panetta, Mitch Daniels, Sens. Mike Braun (R-Ind.), Tom Carper (D-Del.), Angus King (I-Maine), Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), Rick Scott (R-Fla.), Mark Warner (D-Va.) and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), Reps. Jimmy Panetta (D-Calif.), Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.), Jodey Arrington (R-Texas) and Tom Suozzi (D-N.Y.), Eric Cantor, Michael Steele and Steve Rattner.
SPOTTED at a private fundraiser for Blake Masters at dLeña hosted by Austin Stone, Andrew Beck, Jake Denton and Parker Magid on Wednesday night: Chris Rufo, Raheem Kassam, Jack Posobeic, Saurabh Sharma and Mary Rogers McMaster.
SPOTTED at a Diwali reception hosted by the Indian American Impact Project at the Willard on Wednesday night: Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, Reps. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.), Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) and Andy Kim (D-N.J.), Neera Tanden, Gautam Raghavan, Sabrina Singh, Josh Kaul, Neil Makhija and 200 Indian Americans in public service.
SPOTTED at a book party for Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Walter Pincus’ new book, “Blown to Hell: America’s Deadly Betrayal of the Marshall Islanders” ($29.99), hosted by George and Elizabeth Stevens: Barbara and John Cochran, Kate Lehrer, Alan Greenspan and Andrea Mitchell, Eden Rafshoon, Mary Graham, and Diana and Mallory Walker.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — BIDEN ADMINISTRATION’S FIRST EQUITY CONVENING: On Tuesday, the Department of Commerce, the Ford Foundation, the U.S. Impact Investing Alliance, B Lab, Families and Workers Fund and Ariel Investments will host the Biden administration’s first ever Interagency Convening on Equitable Economic Growth — an interagency meeting/summit bringing together people from the government, business and philanthropic communities to discuss policies to advance economic equity among communities of color and other underrepresented groups. The event will feature remarks from Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, domestic policy adviser Susan Rice and others.
STAFFING UP — The White House announced a handful of nominations Wednesday, including Nick Perry to be ambassador to Jamaica and Kurt DelBene to be assistant VA secretary for information and technology and CIO.
TRANSITIONS — Mia Ehrenberg is now comms director for Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (D-N.Y.). She most recently was deputy press secretary for Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and is a Cameron Webb alum. … Emily Coyle is joining Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney as a principal. She previously was senior director and head of U.S. cybersecurity and privacy policy at SAP.
WEEKEND WEDDING — Emilie Simons, White House assistant press secretary, and Steven Bernitt, manager at WASHREIT, got married at the Claremont Club & Spa in Berkeley, Calif., on Saturday. The two met at a mutual friend’s house on Emilie’s first weekend in D.C. in 2014. Pic … Another pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Erik Smith, partner at Seven Letter, and Edith Gregson of Edith Gregson Interiors welcomed daughter Davey Nolan Smith on Oct. 28. She came in at 8 lbs, 12 oz and joins her older sister and three older brothers. Pic … Another pic
BIRTHWEEK (was Saturday): Alexandra Wasielak of the German Marshall Fund
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Turning an Eye Toward the Midterms
Plus: The battle over vaccine mandates for first responders.
The Dispatch Staff | 3 |
Happy Thursday! Nearly the whole Dispatch team—including the out-of-towners—was able to get together in Washington, D.C., yesterday, and it was just delightful.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The Federal Reserve announced Wednesday its widely anticipated plans to begin scaling back its monthly purchases of U.S. Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities in light of the “substantial” progress the economy has made over the past year. Fed officials said they will continue to keep interest rates near zero, and reiterated their belief that—although the timing is uncertain—the economy will eventually adjust to the supply and demand imbalances causing inflation.
- In a statement issued Wednesday morning, Democrat Terry McAuliffe formally conceded the Virginia gubernatorial race to Republican Glenn Youngkin, urging Virginians to join him in “wishing the best to [Youngkin] and his family.”
- Several news desks formally called New Jersey’s gubernatorial race for incumbent Democrat Phil Murphy on Wednesday. Results show Murphy leading Republican Jack Ciattarelli by 1.2 percentage points, with about 10 percent of the vote—from primarily Democratic areas—still outstanding. Ciattarelli has yet to concede the race.
- Top Iranian negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani confirmed on Wednesday that Iran nuclear deal negotiations with the European Union and United States—paused this summer—will resume in Vienna, Austria, on November 29.
- The Supreme Court on Wednesday heard oral arguments in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, a case in which the justices will assess the constitutionality of a state law requiring New Yorkers to have a “proper cause” for carrying a concealed handgun in public.
- The Department of Defense published its annual report on the People’s Republic of China’s military capabilities, finding that the PRC is accelerating its nuclear program and could have more than 1,000 nuclear warheads by 2030.
- Congressional Democrats remained adamant on Wednesday that their party’s dismal electoral showing this week will not lead them to abandon President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better agenda. House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn said yesterday the defeat “reinforces the fact that we need to get these things done.”
Can the GOP Capitalize on Its Election Success?
In the early hours of Wednesday morning, incoming Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin declared his victory “a defining moment … where we get to stand up and say no to this left, liberal, progressive agenda.” The newly elected Republican defeated Democrat Terry McAuliffe by roughly 3 points in a state President Joe Biden won by 10 just a year earlier. And a short drive up interstate 95 in New Jersey, Republican Jack Ciatarelli lost by a point to incumbent Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy in a race few predicted would be competitive.
Among the main questions political operatives debated in the wake of these strong Republican performances and GOP success down-ballot: What does this mean for the 2022 midterms? Do these results and Joe Biden’s dismal approval numbers—along with a GOP-friendly map—point to big gains for congressional Republicans? It’s true that much can change between now and then—those contests are a long way off and, as the hoary cliche has it, a year is a lifetime in politics. But it’s also the case that results in a year will be determined in part by decisions made today and the shift in the political landscape this week may have some would-be candidates thinking more seriously about running next year than they were a short time ago.
“I think there’s people who are potentially more interested in running than certainly there was yesterday morning,” a GOP operative working on Senate races told The Dispatch Wednesday.
The operative said that the results in Virginia and New Jersey affirm the strategy that the GOP has adopted over the last nine months. “We need to hold on to the gains made among white working-class voters, we need to continue the trend of Hispanic voters coming to our side, and we need to win back some of the suburban voters that we’ve lost,” the operative said.
Three reluctant potential tier-one Republican Senate candidates—Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, and New Hampshire Gov. Gov. Chris Sununu—are being pushed hard again to take on Democratic incumbents in their states.
A second GOP source assessed the trio this way: “Sununu should be hopefully deciding in the next two weeks. I’ve heard kind of a mixed bag on Hogan. And as of now, it’s pretty unlikely that Ducey does it. But, this source added, “if there was hesitation on their parts or they were a hard no, [Youngkin’s victory] might soften them up a little bit.”
Sununu, who has been urged to run against Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan, told News9+ Politics in late October that he will reveal his decision in the “next few weeks.”
Speaking in January, Ducey’s communications director, C.J. Karamargin, told reporters that the outgoing governor harbored no secret intention of seeking a Senate seat. Hogan, meanwhile, has insisted repeatedly that he will finish out his term as governor, which ends in January 2023, before considering a senatorial run. “I’ve said like a million times I haven’t really expressed any interest whatsoever in that,” he told a local news site, Maryland Matters, in August.
But some have speculated that the prospect of a “red wave” come next year might entice candidates who have previously publicly vowed not to run. Following Youngkin’s win, Sabato’s Crystal Ball at the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics changed its ratings for U.S. Senate races in Arizona, Nevada, and Georgia from “Lean Democrat” to “Tossup.”
“If Biden is struggling in Virginia, a state that he won by 10 points, these are all states that are less blue than Virginia,” said J. Miles Coleman from Sabato’s Crystal Ball. “So you have to imagine Biden is probably even more under water in those States.”
In Maryland, a state considerably more blue than Virginia, a recent Goucher College Poll found that Hogan continues to get exceptionally high marks, with 68 percent of respondents reporting that they approve of the job he is doing as governor. Biden, meanwhile, has a solid but waning approval rating at 53 percent, down from 62 percent in March 2021.
To be sure, the job descriptions for governor and senator are fundamentally different, both in function and in constituent perception. While Hogan boasts support among Maryland’s moderate and Democratic voters, it’s unclear whether his bipartisan popularity will translate to national politics.
“He’s popular, but as soon as Democrats see, well, you may like what he does at the state level, but once he starts voting with Mitch McConnell, he’s probably going to have less crossover support,” Coleman said. “No matter how popular you are as governor, it’s hard to run in states that don’t match your partisanship at the federal level.” McConnell has lobbied Hogan hard to run, promising significant fundraising help if the governor were to challenge incumbent first-term Sen. Chris Van Hollen.
In an interview with conservative talk radio host Hugh Hewitt in October, Hogan again downplayed his interest in the Senate, saying that he preferred an executive role. “I’ve been saying for a long time that I don’t have a lot of interest in the Senate,” the governor said. “It’s just not the kind of job for me. I’m more of an executive. I’m running a $50 billion dollar a year budget with 60,000 employees and making decisions every day. And you know, I’ve spent my whole life as a business executive. And being one of 100 people yelling and arguing in Washington and getting nothing done doesn’t have a great appeal to me.” When Hewitt suggested working alongside West Virginia’s Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin and other centrists, Hogan acknowledged that “a lot of people are making that argument” and that he’s been listening. “I don’t throw them out of the office,” he said.
As for Ducey, a source familiar with the Arizona governor’s thinking tells The Dispatch that “nothing has changed” regarding a prospective Senate run. “But the fact that there’s speculation swirling, that shouldn’t come as a surprise,” the source said. Speaking of the current head of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, the source said: “Rick Scott—what’s his job? To get people who can win Senate elections. So it may be as much a statement about the current state of the race [in Arizona] and who’s in it.”
“Rick Scott for some reason really wants Ducey to run,” Coleman said.
Republicans are also hoping to regain ground in the House, eyeing new districts with Democratic incumbents. In a statement released following Youngkin’s victory, the National Republican Congressional Committee announced plans to target the seats of Reps. Greg Stanton of Arizona, Ed Perlmutter of Colorado, Joe Courtney of Connecticut, Darren Soto of Florida, Sanford Bishop of Georgia, Frank Mrvan of Indiana, David Trone of Maryland, G. K. Butterfield of North Carolina, Annie Kuster of New Hampshire, Teresa Leger Fernandez of New Mexico, Madeleine Dean of Pennsylvania, Jim Cooper of Tennessee, and Jennifer Wexton of Virginia.
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy has also taken cues from the Virginia governor’s race. Seeking to capitalize on an issue that animated the Virginia contest, McCarthy said during a Wednesday press conference, that House Republicans will “will soon unroll a ‘Parents’ Bill of Rights.’” There is some irony in the GOP insistence that Tuesday’s results will have profound national implications. McAuliffe tried desperately to nationalize the contest, focusing on Donald Trump and the national GOP, while Youngkin ran a disciplined campaign taking advantage of the challenging national environment for Democrats but concentrated on local issues that motivated Virginia voters.
Vaccine Mandates and Public Safety
Major cities across the U.S. have implemented vaccine mandates for city workers. Despite generally high vaccination rates, the number of holdouts and the threat of mass resignations show the sometimes thorny situations facing local governments as they try to persuade workers to get vaccinated.
New York City’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate for city workers kicked in on Monday; roughly 9,000 of the city’s 378,000 employees were placed on leave for refusing to be inoculated and not having an approved or pending medical or religious exemption. In Chicago, meanwhile, an Illinois Circuit Court judge stepped in on Monday to prevent the city from enforcing a December 31 vaccine requirement for police officers. The stay is temporary and meant to give the police union time to complete its arbitration process with city government officials.
The New York Times reported that de Blasio’s vaccine mandate caused some pushback among first responders, especially in the fire department, and that about 2,000 firefighters have used sick days as a form of protest against the mandate.
The threat of mass resignations lingers, a Los Angeles-area sheriff warned in a letter. He called the “mass exodus” caused by a vaccine mandate an “imminent threat to public safety.” A spokesperson from Los Angeles County told The Dispatch the county has “not seen an increase in early retirements or resignations among sworn staff in the Sheriff’s Department since the vaccination policy took effect.”
In Chicago, about 73 percent of the city’s police officers have reported their vaccination status as of November 1. Of the 12,758 employees in the department, slightly more than 7,400 officers have been fully vaccinated, while around 1,700 said they were “not fully vaccinated.” It’s unclear whether those who answered no were partially vaccinated or had not taken the shot at all. More than 3,000 police department employees had not yet provided their status.
In putting Chicago’s mandate on pause, Illinois Circuit Court Judge Raymond Mitchell wrote that due to its unionized workforce, the city’s police officers have the right for their objections to be worked out in the arbitration process before the mandate is implemented. However, he didn’t prevent the city from implementing a requirement for officers to provide their vaccination status, and to submit to regular testing if they are not vaccinated.
“The reporting obligation itself is a minimal intrusion,” Mitchell wrote.
The precedent for state and localities’ authority to require vaccination dates back to a 1905 Supreme Court case, Jacobson v. Massachusetts. The court ruled that it is constitutional for states to require members of the public to be inoculated against smallpox or be penalized with a fine.
Legal battles over vaccine requirements and what exemptions might apply are starting to make their way up to the Supreme Court, and justices have so far have refused to interfere with mandates.
Last week, the court declined to prevent Maine from requiring the state’s health care workers to be vaccinated. Three of the court’s most conservative justices—Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch—dissented.
The court previously opted not to block Indiana University’s vaccine mandate, leaving a lower court’s decision in place. Eight students had sued the university on the grounds that the mandate violated their constitutional rights vis-a-vis “bodily integrity, autonomy, and medical choice.” The campus offered exemptions on religious, ethical, and medical grounds.
Dr. William Schaffner—an infectious disease specialist at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center who is currently a non-voting liaison to the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices—told The Dispatch that “there are really very few genuine medical exemptions to these vaccines.”
He gave two primary examples: individuals who have had a record of serious allergic reactions to vaccines that share ingredients with the COVID-19 vaccines, and those who may have had a serious reaction to the first dose, such that a doctor advised them against further inoculation.
That reaction would be something like anaphylactic shock, an allergic response that can induce difficulty breathing and other symptoms that can be very serious if not treated quickly.
Schaffner added that while these types of reactions are “pretty darn rare,” they can and do happen.
And what about the claim that the vaccine mandate violates personal liberty? “Weak,” Keith Whittington, a politics professor at Princeton University, told The Dispatch via email. “Long-standing SCOTUS precedent says [this is] not a high hurdle.”
When it comes to employers, “courts apply a pretty deferential standard,” Walter Olson, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute’s Robert A. Levy Center for Constitutional Studies, told The Dispatch. “It wouldn’t surprise me if employers won all of the [challenges].”
Union contracts are a complicating factor, he added. “The whole process of settling the dispute is different, they go into arbitration.” Judges might be more likely to allow that process to work itself out. But ultimately, “employers can generally ask for vaccine mandates.”
Worth Your Time
- In a piece for The Atlantic, Dr. Monica Gandhi argues that this week’s approval of pediatric COVID-19 vaccines should be viewed as one of the final steps on the path back to normalcy. “By now, Americans should realize that there isn’t a magic solution that will make COVID go away,” she writes. “But within two or three months of introducing vaccines for 5-to-11-year-olds, the U.S. should be able to begin winding down most of the formal and informal limits to which Americans have become accustomed—office closures, masking mandates, educational interruptions, six-foot distancing, and more.”
- Postmortems on how Republicans captured Virginia have already begun. For FiveThirtyEight, elections analyst Geoffrey Skelley crunched the numbers and found that Republican businessman Glenn Youngkin outperformed his benchmark margins in most of Virginia and beat former President Donald Trump’s 2020 performance in every locality in the state. “We can’t know with absolute certainty that the Virginia race is a harbinger of things to come in the 2022 midterm elections,” he writes. “But the result does show how damaging an electoral environment like the current one could be for the Democrats next year.”
- If Democrats truly believe the current iteration of the Republican Party represents an unprecedented threat to democracy, Yascha Mounk argues, progressives need to take an “unflinching” look at their own role in what played out this week. “The idea that critical race theory is an academic concept that is taught only at colleges or law schools might be technically accurate, but the reality on the ground is a good deal more complicated,” he writes in his latest essay. “[It is] both intellectually dishonest and electorally disastrous [to] insist on a verbal trick unworthy of a middle-school debate team: to keep claiming that widespread concern over these ideas is misguided because the term by which they have publicly come to be known technically applies to an academic research program rather than the lessons that real children are being taught in real schools. And yet, this is precisely what McAuliffe and so many others attempted to do—with disastrous results—over the closing months of his campaign. ”
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- Join Sarah, Jonah, David, and Declan for an all-Election Day edition of The Dispatch Podcast. Will Democrats and Republicans learn the correct lessons from Tuesday’s races? Has the GOP uncovered a post-Trump electability cheat code? And is Biden’s Build Back Better agenda doomed?
- For more Election Day takeaways, look no further than Wednesday’s Sweep! “Clearly picking an electable candidate is important,” Sarah writes. “And a political party willing to give serious thought to what process is most likely to yield the most electable candidate is going to have an advantage in midterm elections.”
- Scott’s Capitolism this week (🔒) focuses on work, and Americans’ increasing unwillingness to do it. “Declining labor force participation in the United States isn’t all bad, but some of it surely is—especially given the labor shortages popping up all over the country right now,” he writes. “[But] the trendiest scapegoats—trade, technology, industry concentration, etc.—materialized years after the largest declines in American wages and actually coincided with slow-but-steady gains in inflation-adjusted compensation across demographic groups over the last 25 years.”
- On the site today, Danielle Pletka notes that the Biden administration has weighed its options in Syria and decided on capitulation: “Team Biden should recommit U.S. troops to the fight in northern Syria, and reconcile itself to the notion that a) betraying another ally is a bad look; and b) that the battle inside Syria hardly distracts from the larger mission on China.”
- Scott Winship files the latest in his series on poverty policy during the pandemic, saying that the progressive focus on safety net spending left other problems unaddressed, including the learning loss that can impact upward mobility and hurt our economy for decades.
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
33.) THE DAILY WIRE
11.04.2021
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34.) DESERET NEWS
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— When viewed without a party lens, there is majority support for aspects of the Freedom to Vote Act. But Joe Biden and Donald Trump voters express dramatically different opinions on this topic, and, by association, they have divergent viewpoints on the debate currently occurring in the U.S. Senate. (see Figure 1 below) — Opinions are even more polarized on legislation currently being considered at the state level. Biden voters perceive these efforts as tantamount to legalizing voter suppression and giving state legislatures a free hand to prevent certification of elections based on the suspicion of fraud alone. Trump voters view these efforts as necessary to protect against voter fraud and ensure the integrity of our elections. (see Figures 2 and 3 below) — Donald Trump and Trumpism sit at the center of the “why” behind the conflicting and contrasting viewpoints on this vitally important issue. Support for protecting and expanding access correlates with the belief that the reelection of Donald Trump would have resulted in lasting harm to the United States. These voters are programs voters who exhibit what we are calling a “multi-cultural populism” that supports government doing more to help people and views ongoing conflict as a harbinger of bad things to come. Conversely, support for a more restrictive view of voting rights and access correlates with the belief that there was a hidden “deep state” effort to undermine the presidency of Donald Trump. These are values voters who exhibit “nationalistic populism” leanings, are motivated by a shared identity, and embrace most aspects of what is commonly referred to today as Trumpism. The detailAs we noted last week, there are differing views among Biden and Trump voters on certain aspects of the Freedom to Vote Act, a Democratic-backed election law proposal that Republicans blocked in the Senate recently. Our findings are in Figure 1. Biden and Trump voters stake out very different positions on these issues. Whereas the share of Biden voters who strongly favor the expansion of access to voting is 72%, that number drops to 32% among Trump voters. Biden voters are significantly more likely than Trump voters to favor ending congressional district gerrymandering (66% vs. 44%, respectively). And 55% of Biden voters strongly favor automatic voter registration, compared to just 23% of Trump voters. Figure 1: “Strong” support for aspects of the Freedom to Vote ActBy last count, literally hundreds of bills have been introduced across many states with the goal of impacting and changing election rules. Some present as making voting easier and more accessible — such as expanding access to early and mail voting and making voter registration easier. Others present as more restrictive — such as making it more difficult to vote early or by mail, and enacting stricter ID requirements. We asked Biden and Trump voters to indicate their own opinions regarding these potential new laws, and whether they agree or disagree that state legislatures should be able to prevent their state’s election officials from certifying an election if members of the legislature say they suspect there was illegal voting activity. Overall, a slight majority say the intent of legislation currently being considered at the state level is voter suppression (52%), and not making elections more secure (48%) — see Figure 2. On the other hand, the majority (53%) express at least some agreement with the idea that state legislatures should be able to stop election certification on the suspicion of fraud vs. 47% who express at least some disagreement with this statement — see Figure 3. But the overall numbers mask exceptionally large partisan differences. Most Biden voters (70%) say the true purpose of these bills is to make voting more difficult for voters who are more prone to vote against the sponsoring party’s candidates (vs 30% of Trump voters). By contrast, 69% of Trump voters say these new laws are necessary to prevent voting fraud and protect the integrity of elections (vs 31% of Biden voters). Figure 2: Voter suppression vs. election integrityFigure 3: Agree/disagree election certificationThe why behind the numbers: Donald Trump and TrumpismTo uncover what drives these starkly different positions, we ran an analysis amongst 2020 Biden and Trump voters to identify and understand the underlying attitudes and opinions that associate most closely with responses to the voting rights questions discussed above. These results show that, overall, those who support protecting and expanding voting rights exhibit multi-cultural populist and progressive leanings that are bolstered by shared values, view ongoing conflict as a harbinger of bad things to come, and fear Donald Trump and what he represents. Support for positions associated with protecting and expanding voting rights and access correlates with positive reactions to many aspects of President Biden’s economic and infrastructure agenda; with support for President Biden’s renewed alliances approach (vs. Donald Trump’s America First approach); with their belief that the reelection of Donald Trump would have resulted in lasting harm to the United States, and that President Biden won the election fairly. These are “hard infrastructure, human infrastructure” programs voters — in other words, voters who want government to do more to proactively advance progress in these areas. Conversely, those who adhere to a more restrictive view of voting rights exhibit a nationalistic populism and embrace most aspects of what is commonly referred to today as Trumpism. Support for positions typically associated with making it more difficult for people to vote correlates with adherence to conspiracy beliefs; adherence to authoritarian and anti-democratic beliefs; anti-immigration and anti-multicultural positions; anti-masking sentiments on COVID-19; and pro-Trump (strongly approve of his job performance and of him now), and pro-traditional values (that “old-fashioned ways” and “old fashioned values” still show the best way to live) positions. These are “Traditionalism, Trumpism” values voters — in other words, voters motivated by a shared identity who gravitate towards positions that speak to their values and, especially, their concerns about where the country is headed and their role in it. Trumpism and the polarization of our electionsDonald Trump plays an outsized role in coloring voter perceptions of the election law changes being debated today at the federal and state level. That is an essential finding of our look into opinions on voting rights and access. On the one hand, support for expanding access correlates with the belief that the reelection of Donald Trump would have resulted in lasting harm to the United States. On the other hand, support for a more restrictive view of voting rights and access correlates with the belief that there was a hidden “deep state” effort to undermine the presidency of Donald Trump. As we have detailed in previous releases, the “Trump Effect” — and the other side’s response to it — is real and pervasive. It is affecting and animating America’s fissures across a range of issues: — The fear and distrust Biden and Trump voters exhibit for each other which leads them to embrace conflict over compromise and finding ways to live together. — Conflicting attitudes on race and immigration that yield deep and divisive personal concerns and policy tensions that serve as fuel for our national divide. — A willingness amongst Biden and Trump voters to countenance anti-democratic tendencies if needed to serve their priorities. — And a national split on election laws and the role they play in ensuring our elections are both free and fair, something the future of our representative democracy clearly depends on. America is at the ledge. And while we have and will highlight targeted pathways to building public civility and inspiring public trust, what’s clear is we need to get started on these changes as soon as possible. Otherwise, we will find that we’ve waited until it is too late, that whatever advantages our representative democracy promised have slipped away, and that we are playing on the more divisive and dangerous terms — and their potential to give rise to politically motivated violence and upheaval — that increasingly dominate our national discourse. This is not a legacy that any of us should be comfortable bequeathing to the generations of Americans to come. About the pollFrom July 22 to Aug. 4, 2021, Project Home Fire worked with InnovateMR, an industry-leading top 20 marketing research data collection firm, to capture online responses to more than 300 questions spanning social, political, and psychological topics from 1,001 Donald Trump presidential election voters and 1,011 Joe Biden voters (N=2,012), with a margin of error of +/- 2.2 percentage points.
Read the fine printLearn more about the Crystal Ball and find out how to contact us here. Sign up to receive Crystal Ball e-mails like this one delivered straight to your inbox. Use caution with Sabato’s Crystal Ball, and remember: “He who lives by the Crystal Ball ends up eating ground glass!” |
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38.) THE BLAZE
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Democrats are examining the wreckage from Election Day and trying to figure out who to blame. The windiest nation in Europe can offer the U.S. some key lessons as it looks to new sources of renewable energy. Plus, you’ll never guess TikTok’s unlikely new star.
Here’s what we’re watching this Thursday morning. After taking a political shellacking in elections Tuesday, Democrats are engaged in some soul searching — and finger pointing — as they assess their losses.
The White House is trying to deflect blame away from President Joe Biden’s low approval ratings. Instead, people close to the White House are blaming the results on voter frustration over Washington infighting and warning that congressional Democrats could suffer the same fate.
But as Democrats take a closer look at Virginia’s high-profile gubernatorial race, they may find that dismissing Glenn Youngkin’s emphasis on schools could have been what helped to cost them an election in a state they were favored to win.
White women voters may have made the difference for Republicans in Virginia, swinging by double digits towards the GOP and giving the party a potentially winning playbook in future elections.
Analysts will also be looking at Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy’s razor thin victory in New Jersey for signs of how Republicans are gaining ground in blue states as the 2022 midterm elections approach. Thursday’s Top Stories
The U.S. currently has seven offshore wind turbines; the U.K. has over 10,000. As the Biden administration looks to develop large-scale wind farms along the entire U.S. coastline, they can look to the COP26 host nation for some key lessons. New research, while considered preliminary, may shed light on why some people experience ongoing neurological symptoms, such as brain fog. A Pentagon review of the U.S. drone strike that killed 10 Afghan civilians, including seven children, in Kabul on Aug. 29 found that video footage showed at least one child present two minutes before the strike was launched. OPINION As the investigation into what happened on the set of “Rust” unfolds, we shouldn’t allow ourselves to think that the only thing of concern on a film set are the guns, cinematographer Bill Dill writes in an opinion piece. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
Medical professionals and misinformation experts are warning that the push to vaccinate kids has already been seized on by groups looking to spread anti-vaccination messages. Select
From gamers to audiophiles, you can gift some great gadgets to wow your tech-minded family members — or the ones who just really need an upgrade One Fun Thing
There appears to be a new unlikely TikTok star — and it’s a big green bird that will threaten people for missing their French lessons.
The Duolingo owl, better known as the furry icon that frequently reminds language learners to do their daily exercises, has made a hoot on TikTok for featuring a life-size version of its mascot in lighthearted, tongue-in-cheek — and sometimes unhinged — videos.
Read more about it here. Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App 30 Rockefeller Plaza New York, NY 10112 |
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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73.) POPULIST PRESS
The phenomenon, reminiscent of some of the election night anomalies witnessed in 2020, was documented and shared by
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🚨RED ALERT: Steve Bannon Makes Massive Announcement On Air
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TOP STORIES:
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Officials Fix Voting Error… Now There’s a NEW Leader In Governor’s Race
- US Troops Forced To Surrender…
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Steve Bannon Makes Massive Announcement On Air
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SCOTUS Poised To Make Major Second Amendment Change…
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BREAKING: Democrat Tricks in New Jersey Governor’s Race
- Jesse Watters Drops Major News on Air — ‘They Turned On Biden’
- Embarrassing Kamala Harris Video Goes Viral
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PELOSI DONE…
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BREAKING: Ilhan Omar HUMILIATED After Losing Big
- First black, Female Lt. Governor of Virginia is everything Democrats fear…
- The Race Card Is Dead…
- McAuliffe Refuses to Concede Before Doing a Weird Dance
- ‘Blood Bath’ At Liberal New Stations Upon Crushing Red Tsunami
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IN DEPTH:
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- China Urges Citizens to Stockpile Food … 57 mins ago
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- Never-Before Seen FBI Footage Of Rittenhouse Shooting…2 hours ago
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74.) THE POST MILLENNIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Welcome to the Thursday edition of Internet Insider, where we explore identities online and off. Today:
BREAK THE INTERNET TikTok shows aftermath of Torah vandalism at fraternity house On Tuesday, a TikTok posted by the outlet Jewish Unpacked reported that a fraternity at George Washington University was “broken into & vandalized.”
“Their small Torah was ripped apart & had detergent poured all over it,” @JewishUnpacked wrote in the overlay text of the video.
The video then shows hundreds of students and other supporters gathered around the fraternity house in solidarity with George Washington University’s chapter.
The Washington Post reported that there were marches on campus streets and demonstrations at GW Hillel, an on-campus Jewish organization.
In an interview with CNN, George Washington’s Tau Kappa Epsilon chapter President Chris Osborne said that fraternity members found the torah and other religious texts covered in laundry detergent on Sunday morning.
Osborne called the vandalism an “act of antisemitism.”
“There was a Christian Bible and a Jewish Torah in the room,” he told CNN. “Only the Jewish Torah was vandalized. I believe it was a hate crime.”
In addition to the damaged Torah, Osborne told the Washington Post that the perpetrators had put hot sauce on the walls of the fraternity house and ripped out smoke detectors from its ceiling.
In a statement, Tau Kappa Epsilon’s national chapter said it was “disappointed, frustrated, and sickened” by the vandalism.
“This attack on Greek Life and display of Anti-Semitism has no place in our society,” the statement continues.
Read the full story here. Contributing Writer
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POOR TASTE TikToker finds out she has 50 siblings after DNA test A TikToker shared in a now-viral video how she discovered she has 50 siblings.
In videos posted in September, @izzyvn_98 details her experience of using a DNA genealogy test to explore her heritage, only to find out that she isn’t “as Italian” as she thought she was and that has 50 biological siblings.
“I get a message from a random woman asking if I’m related to a specific person or family because I matched with her daughter and I said no,” the text overlay reads. “She then asks me if I was a sperm donor baby because her daughter was too and now I’m freaking out because she could be my sister.”
Additional text overlays explain that she also matched with her sperm donor’s half sister, among others.
“The donor’s half sister then matches with me and DMs me saying other mothers who used the same donor, and their children are part of a private Facebook group, and that I should join too,” the text reads. “I join the page and turns out there are 50 of us who are siblings and children of the same sperm donor… and we’re all different ages.
“And now there’s paranoia about overpopulation because some of them are afraid there are so many of us, we may end up dating someone who happens to be a sibling.”
Some commenters on the video shared that they are also children of sperm donors and similarly discovered multiple siblings through DNA tests. One commenter said that they are one of 100.
Read the full story here.
SELF-CARE Fall eats: White chili with chicken It’s getting chilly out there—and I’ve got chili on the mind. As Salt Lake City dips below 50 degrees most nights, and the nights are coming sooner, I’m dreaming of all the cold-weather meals I can make.
When I’m feeling ambitious, I’ll make Swedish turkey meatballs (from scratch, not IKEA) or cheeseburger soup. The one-pot meals are the best: Chili, stew, goulash.
A family recipe for white chili with chicken is among my favorites and one of the easiest in my back pocket. Here’s how it goes:
Heat oil in a medium pot and sauté 1/2 onion until soft. Add the garlic and spices and cook for one minute or until fragrant. Add shredded chicken, chilis, and beans and cook for 5 minutes. Serve with crushed tortilla chips, shredded Monterey Jack cheese, and diced onion—and enjoy!
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77.) HEADLINE USA
78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Thursday 11.04.21 It’s Diwali, the cultural and religious festival of lights celebrated by many with South Asian heritage. For many Indian Americans, it’s a time to make longstanding traditions and celebrations their own. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. A customer pumps gas last week in Honolulu. Economy
After more than a year and a half of intense economic stimulus measures, the Federal Reserve is finally — gently — applying the brakes on bond buying and other economic supports. This is called tapering, and it’s intended to return things to normal in a way that keeps prices and unemployment as stable as possible. The Fed also hopes the move will address high inflation, which is quelling hope of an economic recovery. Prices of groceries and gas are still rising, with a national average of $3.40 a gallon at the pump — a seven-year high. This tapering process will have a long tail, and for now, the Fed will maintain its target interest rates near zero. However, it still feels like a milestone in the pandemic, and the results could have a huge impact on everyday people, especially those looking to buy a home or run a business.
Climate
At least 20 countries have agreed to end financing for fossil fuel projects abroad in a deal that’s expected to be announced today as part of the COP26 summit in Glasgow. Several countries made a similar deal this week to end international financing for coal, but this new one will be the first of its kind to include oil and gas projects, too. The summit is now in the nitty-gritty phase of negotiations, with groups trying to reach agreements on everything from emissions reporting transparency to forest protection. More than 450 companies across 45 countries have also signed on to the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero, which aims to deliver $100 trillion in financing over the next three decades to combat the climate crisis.
Coronavirus
Some employers, including New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority, may not pay death benefits to families whose unvaccinated loved ones die of Covid-19. While some are calling such policies needlessly cruel, others say they are in line with some penalties leveraged against workers who ignore on-the-job safety precautions. As employers work to create or maintain vaccine mandates, limiting other benefits — such as short-term disability payments — to unvaccinated workers are also on the table. Meanwhile, China is scrambling to contain its most widespread Covid-19 outbreak since the first wave of infections that began in 2019 in Wuhan.
Elections
New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy has eked out a victory, becoming the first Democratic governor in more than four decades to win reelection there. The race was far closer than many Democrats had assumed. Combined with a demoralizing defeat in the Virginia gubernatorial election, Democrats are now trying to glean lessons from this week’s big races to take into the midterm elections next year. Tuesday’s races provided other road tests as well, like in Georgia, where voters headed to the polls for the first time under the state’s new restrictive voting laws. Activists used the opportunity to try to estimate what conditions would look like in a larger-scale election.
Immigration
Attorneys are still trying to reach the parents of 270 migrant children who were separated at the US-Mexico border under the Trump administration. President Biden created a reunification task force after taking office, and 58 children have been reunited since then. However, it looks like earlier pledges of financial compensation for such families are now blowing in the wind. Migrant families separated at the US-Mexico border under the Trump administration’s “zero-tolerance” policy were reported to be eligible for significant financial compensation, to the tune of $450,000, as part of ongoing settlement negotiations between the Justice Department and the families’ lawyers. Biden said yesterday those families will not get those payments but did not get into details about any other possible monetary settlements for them.
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How to enjoy working out if you hate exercise
A couple thought they were being burgled. Then they found a bear on their balcony 1 That’s how many jurors selected for the trial over Ahmaud Arbery’s killing are Black. Prosecutors accused defense attorneys of disproportionately striking qualified jurors of color. Judge Timothy Walmsley said the defense appeared to be discriminatory in selecting the jury but that the case could go forward anyway. I feel like a walking corpse. Every day I was acting, which person is the real me?
Peng Shuai, a former Chinese pro tennis player who penned a post on Chinese social media site Weibo accusing a retired vice premier of pressuring her into having sex. Her post has triggered a rush of censorship by Chinese authorities. Brought to you by CNN Underscored 20 Amazon products our readers were obsessed with in October Last month saw readers shopping for things to keep their skin dewy, their homes tidy and, despite the colder weather, their bellies full of ice cream. All that glitters Sponsor Content by Bankrate Get 15-year refi rates as low as 1.92% Now could be the last chance for homeowners to refinance at historic rates. Get a quote on Bankrate today.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- Are Americans In Favor of Free Speech?
- Two footnotes to last night
- Dems Remain Delusional
- As Virginia goes. . .
- Soft-on-crime DA candidates lose big on Long Island
Are Americans In Favor of Free Speech?
Posted: 03 Nov 2021 04:16 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)Periodically you see a poll that suggests support for free speech in the U.S. is weak, and that the First Amendment wouldn’t be adopted by contemporary Americans. But this Rasmussen survey finds something quite different:
These were the questions asked:
In 2016, Donald Trump ran as an opponent of political correctness. Cancel culture is basically political correctness, with an added element of viciousness. For 72% to say that cancel culture is “out of control” is remarkable. This, too:
There is no racial division here; if anything, whites may be slightly more sympathetic to cancel culture than other groups. Which makes sense, actually, if you pay attention to Facebook and Twitter:
This is the most important question:
I suppose those 16% are mostly college students or recent graduates, having been incubated in an anti-free speech environment. Happily, they are a small minority. Of course, Democrats are far more likely than Republicans and Independents to be anti-free speech, but even among Democrats, it’s only 27%. Take that as one more bit of good news in a week that has plenty already. |
Two footnotes to last night
Posted: 03 Nov 2021 03:27 PM PDT (Scott Johnson)Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump in New Jersey by 16 points in 2020. Incumbent Democratic Governor Phil Murphy has only today pulled into a slight lead over Jack Ciattarelli in his race for reelection with 50 percent of the vote. The red wave that rolled into New Jersey had some surprising currents. The tweet below comes from last night and stands up — see “How a truck driver spent $153 on his N.J. election campaign to likely dethrone a political kingpin” — as I write late in the afternoon on the day after the election. Analyze this.
Virginia Governor-elect Glenn Youngkin is in a good mood the day after his upset of Terry McAuliffe. On a story that has preoccupied me, Youngkin extends his thanks to the Lincoln Project for its contribution to his election. The Democratic operative behind the Lincoln Project hoax wants it to be known that “the poorly conceived stunt always intended to be transparent that its intent was to link Youngkin to Trump and the infamous Charlottesville protests and that its author was indeed the Never Trump Republican operation the Lincoln Project…” Maybe it depends on the meaning of “Republican operation.”
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Dems Remain Delusional
Posted: 03 Nov 2021 12:18 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)One might imagine that Democrats could reflect dispassionately on the results of yesterday’s elections, draw appropriate lessons from them, and emerge as more formidable competitors going forward. You might imagine that, but it won’t happen. Democrats have no capacity for such engagement with reality. Thus, they tell us that Glenn Youngkin’s victory was a triumph of white supremacy. This is Larry Sabato, formerly a Democratic Party hack, now a Krugmanesque hysteric:
Last night, MSNBC was must watch viewing for conservatives:
In liberal commentary, “white backlash” was the order of the day: Virginia votes as poll expert says “white backlash” could power Republican win. It is hard to see how white backlash accounts for the election of a black lieutenant governor, the first black woman to win statewide office in Virginia, or a Hispanic attorney general. But Democrats don’t let facts get in the way of narrative, however delusional that narrative may be. More: A Fox News voter analysis found that Youngkin carried Hispanic voters by a wide margin, 55%-44%. And he scored well with black voters:
In a special election in Texas, a Hispanic Republican, John Lujan, carried a San Antonio House seat in a district that is 73% Latino, and that Joe Biden won by 14 points–despite, or possibly because of, Beto O’Rourke campaigning for his Democrat opponent. Over the next year, Republicans will continue their efforts to win over minority voters, while Democrats will continue to babble incoherently about “racism.” Prospects are bright for 2022. STEVE adds—One interesting result of the exit polls is that Youngkin nearly doubled Trump’s share of the black women’s vote: Still waiting to see data on how much the Asian and Hispanic vote moved to Youngkin. Meanwhile, I can’t seem to get through to any grief counselors today. The phone lines are busy at every single one of them. Incidentally, speaking of denial, here’s the NY Times front page today—was there an election yesterday? Maybe no one told them. . . And these two tweets make my day:
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As Virginia goes. . .
Posted: 03 Nov 2021 09:37 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)During a rally for Terry McAuliffe, Kamala Harris declared that “what happens in Virginia will, in large part, determine what happens in 2022, 2024, and on.” Like much of what Harris says, this statement is false. There will be no causal relationship between this year’s Virginia election and the elections in 2022 and 2024. It’s true, though, that the Virginia results are a bad sign for the Democrats’ prospects in 2022. George Allen’s victory in that state’s 1993 gubernatorial race (Republican Christine Todd Whitma won in New Jersey the same year) was followed by a wipeout of Democrats in the 1994 congressional races. And Bob McDonnell’s victory in 2009 was followed by a huge Republican year in 2010. However, I don’t think we can draw any conclusions from last night when it comes to the 2024 presidential race. Readers will probably remember that three years after the GOP Virginia wins in 1993 and 2009, incumbent Democrats were reelected president. Three years isn’t “a lifetime” in politics, but it’s a long time. Bill Clinton changed course after the 1994 wipeout. He brought in Dick Morris and “triangulated” with Republicans. Barack Obama didn’t triangulate, but after 2010 he stopped pushing the envelope for two years. For example, he resisted calls to grant amnesty to illegal immigrants. I don’t expect Joe Biden to react much to the Virginia race. (Clinton and Obama didn’t.) There will be plenty of congressional Democrats pushing him to stay the course. And it will be easy enough for him to blame the bad news from Virginia and New Jersey (whichever way that race ends up going) on the failure to push the leftist agenda through Congress — ridiculous as that claim seems. A wipeout in 2022, if it happens, should be enough to cause Biden-Harris to either change course or at least pull back. Lord knows it shouldn’t be difficult to triangulate between Republicans and the Democratic left. Biden did it some extent when he ran for president last year. Indeed, I can’t think of a contemporary politician who has changed course more often than Joe Biden. But there’s a very good chance that, by some time in 2023 if not before, Biden will have decided not to run for reelection. Thus, he may not see much need to change course or pull back, even if the Dems are routed next year. One advantage the Democrats might have in 2024 that they didn’t enjoy (or need) in 1996 and 2012 is Donald Trump. He is a potential spoiler for Republicans — either as the GOP nominee or as a disgruntled loser in a quest for the nomination. The Virginia and New Jersey races illustrate that Republicans can hold rural areas, continue to make inroads with minority group members, and cut deeply into Democratic margins in the suburbs by running attractive conservative candidates who don’t come across as too angry and too threatening. However, in 2024 there may still be plenty of pro-Trump voters who aren’t tired of, or who have forgotten about or denied, all the losing the GOP endured in 2018 and 2020. |
Soft-on-crime DA candidates lose big on Long Island
Posted: 03 Nov 2021 08:40 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Yesterday, Long Island voters swept Democratic district attorneys from office. In Nassau County, career local prosecutor Anne Donnelly upset Democratic state Sen. Todd Kaminsky, a former federal prosecutor and supposed rising star. Kaminsky voted for the 2019 law that eliminated cash bail for defendants accused of many misdemeanors and “non-violent” felonies. Donnelly won by 20 points. Kaminsky is now a fallen star. The story was similar in Suffolk County. There, Republican Ray Tierney defeated Democratic incumbent District Attorney Tim Sini. With most of the vote counted, Tierney was leading 57-43. Unlike Kaminsky, Sini did not support bail reform. In fact, according to the New York Post, he was an early critic of it. He still lost. Even though Sini criticized bail reform, he remained vulnerable to attack for being insufficiently tough on crime. In attacking the incumbent, Tierney said:
With violent crime on the rise, law and order has become a major issue in much of the country. Bail reform — “turn ’em loose” as Donnelly correctly characterized it throughout her successful campaign — has earned the contempt of voters. But, as the Sini-Tierney race shows, even apart from bail reform, voters understand Democrats to be on the wrong side of crime-related issues. And just as is the case with education-related issues, that’s a bad place to be. |
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
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93.) JUST THE NEWS
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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96.) NOT THE BEE
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
99.) MARK LEVIN
November 3, 2021
On Wednesday’s Mark Levin Show, in a revolt against the American Marxists, patriotic Americans spoke up, became activists, and went to the polls. They won, and we’re seeing Republican victories in races all across the country. This program was clear in its call for activism, seven months ago, to identify the American Marxists and stop the siege of their de-growth and critical race theory movements at our local school boards. Then, 55% of Hispanic voters in Virginia voted for Glenn Youngkin, yet the media keeps repeating the Democrats’ lies that Republicans are racist White supremacists. This is why they acted as if Donald Trump were on the ballot because they spent years painting Trump as such. Later, this is a battle between those who love America and those who don’t. Enough of the divisiveness from the irrelevant corrupt media. It’s thanks to activists like Edward Durr, a trucker from NJ, who ran against the NJ Senate President spent $153 and won! Afterward, Democrats and the White House are pushing radical proposals including vaccinating small children. There is no proof to know what effect COVID vaccines will have on kids and that is a fact! The entire purpose of adults getting the vaccine was to protect them from those that may be ill, that includes the unvaccinated! If the vaccine works then there shouldn’t be a problem.
THIS IS FROM:
Spotlight PA
GOP wins 2021 election for the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, plus other results
Fox News
Democratic New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy ekes out win over GOP challenger Ciattarelli
Politico
Dems vow to plow forward on Biden agenda, even after election faceplants
Just The News
Opponents of CRT, COVID closures win school board races nationwide
Rumble
MSNBC’s Joy Reid Claims Education Being Important Is Code For Whites Don’t Like Teaching About Race
Hot Air
In Seattle, a Republican appears to have won the race for City Attorney
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Chip Somodevilla
100.) WOLF DAILY
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