Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday November 5, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
November 5 2021
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Happy Friday from Washington, where President Biden and congressional Democrats offer their third take on new runaway spending. Christian Mysliwiec rounds up Heritage Foundation analysis of what’s in the bill. On the COVID-19 front, Sen. Rand Paul demands Anthony Fauci’s resignation and Sen. Ron Johnson lays out why Biden’s vaccine mandate for private employers is wrongheaded. Mary Margaret Olohan and Fred Lucas report. Johnson also joins the podcast to talk about the consequences. Plus: Jarrett Stepman on education as a GOP opportunity, and Star Parker on progressives gone crazy. Eighty years ago today, War Minister Hideki Tojo secretly orders commanders of Japan’s Combined Fleet to prepare to bomb U.S. warships at Pearl Harbor, the naval base in Hawaii.
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 11.5.21
Your day is better when you start it with a first read on what’s happening in Florida politics.
Good Friday morning.
I want to start the day with a birthday shoutout to one of the best people in The Process, David Johnson.
Video Player
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Congratulations — Another top-of-‘Burn cheer to Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney Principal Mike Grissom and his wife Kristen McDonald Grissom on the upcoming addition to the family — a baby boy expected April 2022. The couple are doing great and looking forward to “making a lifetime of memories.” Congrats!
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Tens of millions of Americans working at companies with 100 or more employees will need to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by Jan. 4 or get tested for the virus weekly, reports The Associated Press.
The new requirements, issued Thursday by the Joe Biden administration, is the boldest move yet to persuade reluctant Americans to finally get a vaccine, despite being widely available for months — or face financial consequences.
If successful, officials believe it will go a long way toward ending a pandemic that has killed more than 750,000 Americans, nearly 60,000 of them in Florida. Biden had signaled the move in September.
The requirements will apply to about 84 million workers at medium and large businesses, although it is unclear how many of those employees are unvaccinated.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration regulations will force the companies to require unvaccinated workers to test negative for COVID-19 at least once a week and wear a mask in the workplace.
OSHA left open the possibility of expanding the requirement to smaller businesses. The conditions will not apply to people who work at home or outdoors.
Stricter rules will apply to another 17 million people working in nursing homes, hospitals, and other facilities that receive money from Medicare and Medicaid. Those workers will not have an option for testing — they will need to be vaccinated.
“‘This rule is absolutely going down:’ Gov. Ron DeSantis rebukes vaccine mandate” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — DeSantis on Thursday vowed to challenge the federal COVID-19 vaccine mandate, calling the order unconstitutional and an “abuse of emergency power.” “Florida will contest that immediately,” DeSantis said, later adding, “I think this rule is absolutely going down.” The legal call-to-arms comes hours after White House officials unveiled a finalized version of the U.S. employer mandate. The mandate, officials say, will impact roughly 84 million workers, or two-thirds of private-sector jobs. The order, implemented by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), threatens fines upward of $14,000 per violation.
“Florida will file lawsuit against COVID-19 vaccine mandate” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Florida declared war Thursday against the federal COVID-19 vaccine mandate, joining a handful of Republican-led states filing lawsuits to halt the controversial health order. Alongside Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo in Tallahassee, DeSantis vowed to protect the livelihoods of the unvaccinated and defeat the emergency health mandate in court. At least two other states will join the suit, Georgia and Alabama. “People are so sick of constantly being bossed around, restricted, mandated,” DeSantis said. The Governor’s vow came hours after White House officials unveiled elements of the U.S. employer mandate.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@TaiKopan: Every one of these election cycles, we take these 51-49 squeakers of a victory, blow them up as some sort of singular dynamic, and never grapple with the fact that American voters almost always choose the opposite of what they have, seemingly never satisfied with their leaders.
—@AnnaForFlorida: You know what would REALLY bring us election integrity? Campaign finance reform. Ending all corporate giving & dark money groups & not allowing the biggest companies, consultants and the wealthiest of people dictate the future of our Democracy. Level the playing field for all.
Tweet, tweet:
—@DougHeye: Has “Whereas it is the right of people to pump their own gas” been on the New Jersey ballot?
—@edokeefe: Is a vote on the Build Back Better bill happening today? “I’ll let you know when I wish to,” @SpeakerPelosi tells reporters at her weekly briefing.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
’Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 1; ’Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 3; U.S. to lift restrictions for fully vaccinated international travelers — 3; Miami at FSU — 5; ‘Hawkeye’ premieres — 9; Special Session on vaccine mandates begins — 10; ExcelinEd National Summit on Education begins — 13; FSU vs. UF — 22; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 24; Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri’s death — 32; Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 35; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 42; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 47; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 54; Private sector employees must be fully vaccinated or tested weekly —60; CES 2022 begins — 61; NFL season ends — 65; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 67; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 67; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 67; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 68; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 70; NFL playoffs begin — 71; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 91; Super Bowl LVI — 100; Daytona 500 — 107; St. Pete Grand Prix — 114; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 120; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 183; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 203; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 209; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 245; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 257; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 336; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 364; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 371; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 406; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 469; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 623. ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 714; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 994.
“The retirement community that was a microcosm of the Florida Special Election” via Matthew Kassel of Jewish Insider — The sprawling Kings Point retirement community in Tamarac has long been viewed as something of a campaign pilgrimage site. The special election to succeed the late Rep. Alcee Hastings — which is likely headed for a recount after Tuesday’s results showed a virtual tie between Broward County Commissioner Dale Holness and health care executive Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick — presented candidates with a similar opportunity to shore up pivotal support from the Kings Point community. Yet an abiding — and not so stupid — question was whether Jewish voters in Kings Point would coalesce around any of the 11 House contenders jockeying for the seat.
First on #FlaPol — “Ex-felon who won Republican CD 20 Primary never applied for right to hold political office” via Corbin Bolies of Florida Politics — The winning Republican in this week’s congressional Primary in South Florida is a former felon who did not go through the state’s process to restore his civil rights after imprisonment, interviews and records show. That step is required under Florida law for a candidate to hold political office. Jason Mariner won Tuesday’s Republican Party primary with 58% of votes in heavily Democratic Florida’s 20th Congressional District. It wasn’t immediately clear whether the election’s outcome would be challenged. The General Election will be on Jan. 11. Democrats have held the seat, one of the most Democratic districts in Florida, for more than two decades.
— STATEWIDE —
“DeSantis puts Jacksonville homicide suspect at center of immigration debate” via Dan Scanlin of The Florida Times-Union — A defendant accused of killing a man he called his uncle in October in Jacksonville has entered pleas of not guilty on charges of second-degree murder and evidence tampering at his arraignment hearing on Thursday. The same day, DeSantis talked about the case and railed against Biden’s immigration policies. On Oct. 6, police found 46-year-old Francisco Javier Cuellar dead in a house on Lone Star Road in Jacksonville just before midnight. Police arrested Yery Noel Medina Ulloa. Police said he was in the country illegally and had faked his name and age.
“Florida’s Hard Rock Sportsbook braces for Friday legal showdown” via John Haughey of The Center Square — The dawn of a new era — an estimated $7 billion is already spent by state residents betting via digital sportsbooks; one analyst projects Florida’s sports wagering market could top $12 billion annually — began without notice other than a “Game On, Florida” link on Seminole websites offering the Hard Rock Sportsbook digital app for download. How long it will stay online has oddsmakers rubbing chins. John Sowinski, who leads a powerful group that’s stymied gaming expansion in Florida since 1978, is betting the plug will be pulled on Hard Rock Sportsbook Friday. No Casinos in September filed a 40-page lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Washington claiming the Florida-Seminole pact is “a clear violation” of federal law and Florida’s Constitution. The suit will be heard Friday.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“University of Florida professor told not to give legal counsel participated in lawsuit anyway” via Danielle Ivanov of The Gainesville Sun — When UF disapproved Dr. Jeffrey Goldhagen‘s requests over the past three months to participate in three lawsuits about the state’s ban on mask mandates, the pediatrician and public health expert was not surprised. Goldhagen, former director of the Duval County Health Department and almost 30-year faculty member with the UF Health College of Medicine in Jacksonville, said he understands university leaders’ political pressure. But he could not ignore his oath and decades of work as a doctor, child advocate and international leader. So, Goldhagen said, he participated anyway. He is at least the fourth UF professor to be restricted over outside legal consulting challenging the state government in recent months and he is one of eight since 2020 who have spoken out.
“Florida nursing homes, VA facilities, get 3-month, $104 million bump to cover increased nursing costs” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Florida lawmakers on Thursday agreed to spend $100 million to increase for three months the amount of money the state pays 692 private nursing homes to care for poor and elderly residents who require institutional care. In addition to approving funding for the private nursing homes, the Joint Legislative Budget Commission also agreed to earmark more than $4.4 million to the Florida Department of Veterans Affairs to cover contracted nursing care costs at five facilities it operates through January 2022. Florida nursing home occupancy rates are plummeting, meaning nursing homes have less revenue coming in. Additionally, nursing care costs are increasing in Florida, and nationwide, due to a tight labor market.
“Lawmakers file memorial calling for more National Guard troops” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Lawmakers may soon call on Congress to beef up the Florida National Guard under a bipartisan memorial filed Thursday. The memorial comes as lawmakers grow increasingly concerned with the Florida National Guard’s lack of manpower. Despite serving the third most disaster-prone state, the Florida Guard ranks second to last in the Guardsmen-to-citizen ratio with roughly 12,000 troops. The issue of troop numbers, however, is a federal prerogative. If passed, the memorials (SM 826 & HM 505) would urge Congress and the United States National Guard Bureau to allow Florida to recruit more troops. Republican Sen. Tom Wright and Democratic Rep. Dan Daley are leading the charge.
“Lawmakers approve additional refugee aid after ‘Remain in Mexico’ influx” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — State lawmakers have approved an additional $33.3 million in federal funds to provide cash assistance to the increasing number of arriving refugees. On Tuesday, the Joint Legislative Budget Commission OK’d the Department of Children and Families to spend those funds through the Refugee Cash Assistance Program. That program grants cash for up to eight months to new refugees ineligible for Temporary Aid for Needy Families benefits. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services fully funds the Refugee Cash Assistance Program, leaving no additional cost to the state. DCF Director of Budget, Finance and Accounting Chad Barrett told lawmakers the funding would “support the increase in newly arriving refugees entering the state of Florida.”
“Lawmakers eye expanding electronic, open-source access to combat college textbook costs” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — State lawmakers are looking at how to further reduce costs for college students by expanding access to electronic and open-source textbooks, building on the successful passing of legislation earlier this year creating a digital academic library network. Members of the House Higher Education Appropriations Subcommittee meeting Thursday took in a presentation by Dr. John Opper, executive director of distance learning and student services at the Florida Virtual Campus, and several prominent state college and university figures. The intent, said Rep. Rene Plasencia, the Subcommittee Chair, was to continue a push toward low-cost, no-cost, and open access to e-textbooks, a trend running in tandem with the increased digitization of media.
“Tina Polsky, Yvonne Hinson seek to undo GOP-backed ‘viewpoint diversity’ law in higher ed” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Two Democratic lawmakers hope to repeal a law approved earlier this year that requires surveys of college and university professors “to assess the status of intellectual freedom and viewpoint diversity” on campus. The GOP-backed legislation (HB 233) also blocks the state Board of Education and Board of Governors from shielding students, employees, colleges, and universities from controversial speech or ideas protected by the First Amendment. Now, Sen. Polsky and Rep. Hinson seek to repeal that law, which was approved during the 2021 Legislative Session and signed into law by DeSantis in June. Polsky and Hinson have introduced companion bills (SB 810 and HB 6077) to strike that new language from Florida law.
“Florida’s awful Bert Harris Act is for the birds” via Craig Pittman of the Florida Phoenix — There is nothing our legislators enjoy better than picking state symbols. They have given us a bunch, from the official state sand (Myakka fine) to the official state play (“Cross and Sword,” last performed in St. Augustine in 1997). Sometimes their choices have resulted in rhubarbs. They fought over which pie to pick (Key lime beat pecan). They resisted naming the panther our state animal even though it had been chosen by schoolchildren (some lawmakers favored the gator). And every few years — this year included — somebody brings up the idea of changing our state bird.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Clifford Block, Corey Preuninger: McLane Company
James Daughton, Doug Bell, Ally Liby-Schoonover, Andrew Palmer, Metz Husband & Daughton: Petland
Carole Duncanson, CLD & Associates: West Coast Inland Navigation District
Andrew Kalel, Sunrise Consulting Group: City of Inverness, Pasco County Board of County Commissioners, Youth and Family Alternatives
Robert Stuart, GrayRobinson: Bombardier Aerospace Corporation
Kate Wesner: American Flood Coalition Action
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida COVID-19 update: Reporting change causes lag in death data” via Devoun Cetoute and Ana Claudia Chacin of the Miami Herald — Since last Friday, Florida has only added four deaths to its COVID tally — at least according to the data reported on the CDC website. However, behind the scenes, the CDC has been working with the Florida Department of Health to return to a previously used reporting method, causing a lag in reporting deaths. “On Monday, Nov. 1, CDC began transitioning jurisdictions reporting by event date back to report date,” said CDC spokeswoman Jasmine Reed. Now, the health department would have to switch back to how it reported cases before the summer change. “Due to reporting changes, there was a lag in death data updates for Florida. CDC is working with the Florida Department of Health to correct the issue.”
“Florida hospitals face COVID-19 vaccine requirements under new Biden administration rule” via Frank Gluck of the Fort Myers News-Press — The Biden administration released rules requiring COVID-19 vaccinations for health care workers, a shot mandate many Florida hospitals so far have avoided and one likely to launch a new front in the state’s opposition to compulsory pandemic inoculations. Under the federal plan, organizations that accept Medicare and Medicaid will have to get their workers fully vaccinated by Jan. 4. They must be at least partially vaccinated by Dec. 5 to provide patient care. This includes most hospitals and long-term care operators. Facilities covered by this regulation must establish a policy ensuring all eligible staff receives the first dose of a two-dose COVID-19 vaccine or a one-dose COVID-19 vaccine before providing any care, treatment or other services by Dec. 5.
“School Board member Jennifer Jenkins files for injunction against Randy Fine, cites ‘cyberstalking’” via Eric Rogers of Florida Today — Brevard County School Board member Jenkins has asked the courts to intervene in a public and increasingly bitter feud with Rep. Fine. Jenkins late last week filed a request for an injunction against Fine with the 18th Circuit Court of Florida, citing “cyberstalking” and a “campaign of harassment on social media … inciting followers to harass and threaten me,” she wrote in a statement to the court, dated Oct. 28. The petition seeks to forbid Fine from publishing Jenkins’ name or “any insinuation of person” on social media and from coming within 500 feet of her place of work at Brevard Public Schools. Fine called Jenkin’s request “dangerous” and “un-American” in his own statement, posted Thursday to Facebook. He called on her to resign if she couldn’t take “legitimate criticism.”
“Richard Corcoran: Leon County school district now in compliance after superintendent eased mask rule” via Ana Goñi-Lessan of the Tallahassee Democrat — Leon County Schools is now in compliance with the state’s emergency rule that banned mask mandates. Hours after education officials told the Tallahassee Democrat they still had not decided whether the district complied, Education Commissioner Corcoran took to Twitter. “I’d like to sincerely thank @leonschools and @brevardschools for reversing their mandatory mask policies by empowering parents,” he tweeted Wednesday night. “Let’s keep working together to provide students a world-class education” It was a markedly different tone from a letter sent by Corcoran just days earlier.
“Faster-spreading strain of delta variant detected in Florida” via CBS Miami — As COVID-19 cases begin to go down, there is a warning about a potentially faster-spreading strain of the delta variant. It has been spotted in Florida and seven other states. Health experts say that although this strain spreads faster, there is no evidence that it causes more severe illness. Current vaccines also appear to be effective against it.
“Lawmakers approve $643M for Regeneron alternative in COVID-19 fight” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Lawmakers have approved an additional $1.2 billion for the Division of Emergency Management to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic, more than half of which is precautionary spending. The agency has played a leading role in the state’s pandemic response, including coordinating federal reimbursements for the state’s pandemic-related activities. Before the Joint Legislative Budget Commission meeting on Thursday, DEM Financial Management Administrator Mark Mahoney presented the billion-dollar request, which includes three projects. The panel unanimously approved the expenditures, all three of which are slated as federal reimbursements. The most significant request is to unlock $643.4 million in anticipated federal funds for the agency to acquire doses of GlaxoSmithKline’s sotrovimab, a recently approved monoclonal antibody treatment that hasn’t been funneled directly through the federal government.
— 2022 —
Cut off: Democratic Governors to take a pass on Florida in 2022 — The Democratic Governors Association will not be helping Florida Democrats defeat DeSantis next year, a major setback for those seeking to unseat the popular Republican Governor. Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida reports that in the previous two gubernatorial cycles, the DGA spent more than $15 million. In 2022, Dixon writes, the DGA plans to “deprioritize” the state in the midterms, using its limited resources to protect incumbent Governors instead. The feeling is Democrats can’t win statewide elections in Florida, sources said. It’s a clear sign that Florida’s reputation as the largest swing state is slipping and that it is now leaning more center-right. “I do think, and I can’t stress this enough, the DGA is playing mostly defense this year, and that’s a monumental change,” said Democratic consultant Jonathan Ducote told POLITICO.
“‘Authoritarian regime’: Charlie Crist slams DeSantis over Special Session, Medicaid expansion” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — U.S. Rep. Crist hammered into DeSantis Thursday at a virtual conference with Protect Our Care Florida, promoting the Build Back Better plan and discussing its impact on health care. Crist, who is also challenging DeSantis in the 2022 gubernatorial race, will join members of Congress in voting on Biden’s infrastructure plan sometime in the coming days. He has continued to advocate for the inclusion of Medicaid expansion laid out in the plan, which would expand coverage to nearly 1 million Floridians. “After emerging from another deadly wave of the pandemic, in which Gov. DeSantis’ soft on COVID policies made Florida the global epicenter not once but twice, it boggles the mind why our Governor is still not working on Medicaid expansion,” Crist said.
“Kevin McCarthy is making a bold prediction one day after Democrats got creamed at the polls: 70+ Democratic-held seats are at risk in 2022.” via POLITICO — Minority Leader McCarthy thinks Democrats under Biden could suffer historic losses in next year’s midterms, seeing more than 70 seats held by Democrats as at risk. “If you’re a Democrat and President Biden won your seat by 16 points, you’re in a competitive race next year. You are no longer safe. … It’ll be more than 70 Democrats that will be competitive,” he said. The last time Democrats controlled all the levers of power, they lost 63 seats in the 2010 midterms, dragged down by issues such as Obamacare and a lagging economic recovery.
“Glenn Youngkin’s victory in Virginia is a warning. It’s also a roadmap.” via Tom Perriello for The New York Times — The clearest message for Democrats nationally is that the fear of Donald Trump 2.0 is not enough to win elections. Congressional Democrats, especially those in tough races, should be sprinting to immediately pass the boldest possible version of 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. I learned this lesson as part of the congressional class that lost the 2010 midterms. While some suggest my vote for the Affordable Care Act cost me my seat, I was sure that the real political cost was incurred by watering down the original proposal and taking far too long to pass it.
“Ruth’s List Florida endorses Eunic Ortiz in SD 24” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Ruth’s List Florida is backing Ortiz for Florida Senate District 24, the group announced Thursday. The group works to elect Democratic women who support abortion rights. Ortiz, who fits that bill, is running for the Pinellas County seat, which covers parts of mid- and north St. Petersburg. She seeks to replace incumbent Republican Sen. Jeff Brandes. Brandes is leaving office due to term limits. “Ruth’s List is proud to be among the first organizations to endorse Ortiz’s campaign,” said Ruth’s List Florida President and CEO Lucy Sedgwick. “She has a proven record advocating for Democratic values and issues, and we’re excited to help her make history as potentially the first lesbian in the Florida Senate.”
“Jessica Baker raises $220K in first month as HD 12 candidate” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Baker, a Republican hopeful in Jacksonville’s House District 12, will report more than $220,000 in fundraising during her first month as a candidate in her October report. Baker, running for the seat currently held by Senate candidate Rep. Clay Yarborough, was expected to have a strong month, and she delivered. None of the funding, Baker notes, is “candidate or spouse” money. Baker, an assistant state attorney in Florida’s 7th Judicial Circuit, raised $132,950 for her campaign and an additional $87,100 for her political committee. Virtually all that money is cash on hand, and her donors are impressive.
“Rosalind Osgood about to resign from Broward School Board to run for Florida Senate. DeSantis gets to pick replacement.” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Osgood, chair of the Broward School Board, faces an imminent deadline to submit her resignation to move forward with her candidacy for Florida Senate. She said Thursday that she plans to submit her resignation letter by the end of the day Friday. It would take effect in four months. The resignation, required under the Florida resign-to-run law, is irrevocable. DeSantis, whose policies are the antithesis of Osgood’s, would get to appoint her replacement to the District 5 School Board seat. Board members pick their chairperson.
“Greg Langowski, longtime Marco Rubio regional director, to run for Westlake Council” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Langowski, who has worked for Rubio for more than a decade, has filed to run for the open Group 4 seat on the Westlake City Council. The city of Westlake is the newest of Palm Beach County’s 39 municipalities. It was incorporated in 2016. Langowski serves as Rubio’s southeast regional director, overseeing Palm Beach, Martin, St. Lucie, Indian River and Okeechobee counties. Langowski joined Rubio in Oct. 2011. Before that, Langowski spent just over six years as the executive director of the Republican Party of Palm Beach County. He is a graduate of Palm Beach Atlantic University. Langowski will be running in an open race for the Group 4 seat held by Councilwoman Katrina Long-Robinson.
“Pensacola’s redistricting map finalized, open to public comment in December” via Emma Kennedy of the Pensacola News Journal — Pensacola’s districting committee has adopted its final iteration of the city’s new voting maps, which will now go to a public inspection period before the City Council’s December vote. The districting committee is made up of one representative appointed by each City Council member to redraw the voting district maps. This is done after each census in an attempt to divide districts roughly equally by population. The committee’s final meeting Wednesday was brief and no changes were made to the previously workshopped maps before sending them off to the legal team to draft official descriptions. From there, they will be published for the public to view and a public hearing will be held on Dec. 15 to give a chance to comment on the maps.
— CORONA NATION —
“U.S. sees longest uptick of new COVID-19 vaccinations in months” via Alexander Tin of CBS News — New COVID-19 vaccinations have accelerated for eight straight days nationwide, according to federal data, marking the longest uptick seen in the U.S. since early August. The nationwide seven-day moving average of first doses climbed to 264,549 a day on October 29, as of the latest figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. All but two states — Utah and West Virginia — are now averaging a faster pace of people starting vaccination than the week prior. The record uptick comes as federal health officials say they continue to ramp up their push for initial vaccinations among adults, along with campaigns to roll out millions of doses for younger children and booster shots for those vaccinated earlier.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“How Tyson Foods got 60,500 workers to get the coronavirus vaccine quickly” via Lauren Hirsch and Michael Corkery of The New York Times — Tyson’s announcement that it would require vaccinations across its corporate offices, packing houses and poultry plants, many of which are situated in the South and Midwest where resistance to the vaccines is high, was arguably the boldest mandate in the corporate world. “We made the decision to do the mandate, fully understanding that we were putting our business at risk,” Tyson’s chief executive, Donnie King, said in an interview last week. “This was very painful to do.” But it was also bad for business when Tyson had to shut facilities because of virus outbreaks. Since announcing the policy, roughly 60,500 employees have received the vaccine, and more than 96% of its workforce is vaccinated.
“Unemployment claims drop to 269,000, another pandemic low” via Paul Wiseman of The Associated Press — The number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits fell to a fresh pandemic low last week, another sign the job market is healing after last year’s coronavirus recession. Jobless claims dropped by 14,000 to 269,000 last week. Since topping 900,000 in early January, the weekly applications have fallen more or less steadily ever since and are gradually moving toward pre-pandemic levels of around 220,000 a week. Overall, 2.1 million Americans were collecting unemployment checks the week of Oct. 23 — down from 7.1 million a year earlier when the economy was still reeling from the coronavirus outbreak. The four-week average of claims, which smooths out weekly ups and downs, dropped below 285,000, also a pandemic low.
“Airbnb posts record results after busy summer travel season” via Meghan Bobrowsky of The Wall Street Journal — Airbnb posted record revenue in the third quarter, punctuating the home-sharing company’s rebound from the collapse in bookings during the early days of the pandemic. The three months covering much of the busy summer vacation period is typically the most lucrative for Airbnb. People resuming more normal travel patterns and other factors helped the company fill the rentals available on its platform. Airbnb said it is preparing for bumper Thanksgiving business, with bookings at the end of September up roughly 40% from the 2019 level. Airbnb on Thursday said revenue for the third quarter reached $2.24 billion, up 67% from the year-ago period. The company’s previous revenue record of $1.65 billion came in the third quarter of 2019.
“Peloton plunges after pandemic sales boom turns to bust” via Mark Gurman of Bloomberg — Peloton cut its annual revenue forecast by as much as $1 billion and lowered its projections for subscribers and profit margins, underscoring its struggles to adjust to a post-pandemic economy. The fitness company — best known for its exercise bikes and remote classes — now expects sales of $4.4 billion to $4.8 billion in fiscal 2022, which ends next June. Less than three months ago, it had been predicting revenue of $5.4 billion. The grim outlook sent the stock tumbling as much as 26% to $64 in late trading. Even before the swoon, Peloton shares were down 43% this year.
“Seller’s regret? Pandemic led to spike in home prices, including one sold by DeSantis” via Elise Elder of Fresh Take Florida — The waterfront home near Jacksonville that DeSantis owned for nearly a decade until selling it has climbed in value by an estimated 50% since the deal. DeSantis effectively lost $232,000 by selling it just a year before the pandemic caused housing prices to surge across the United States. The home’s new owners in Ponte Vedra Beach said they were enjoying their good fortune — and didn’t even know they were buying the Governor’s house until months after the deal closed. According to the government financial disclosure paperwork he submitted, his estimated net worth is $348,832 — including about $164,000 that he and his wife profited when they sold the home for $460,000. It’s now worth an estimated $692,000.
— MORE CORONA —
“WHO says Europe is back at the epicenter of COVID-19 pandemic, despite vaccines” via The Associated Press — Top officials at the World Health Organization said Thursday that Europe has seen a more than 50% jump in coronavirus cases in the last month, making it the epicenter of the pandemic despite an ample supply of vaccines. “There may be plenty of vaccine available, but uptake of vaccine has not been equal,” WHO emergencies chief Dr. Michael Ryan said during a press briefing on Thursday. He called for European authorities to “close the gap” in vaccinations. However, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said countries that have immunized more than 40% of their populations should stop and instead donate their doses to developing countries that have yet to offer their citizens a first dose.
“Inside the world’s most blatant COVID-19 cover-up: Secret burials, a dead President” via Joe Parkinson of The Wall Street Journal — At the Kondo graveyard in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, unmasked volunteers have been digging holes and felling trees to expand a compound that has tripled in size since last year. During the pandemic’s first wave, hazmat-suited government officials came at night to secretly bury the dead, graveyard workers and bereaved families said. Kondo’s gravediggers said those buried there since last year have one thing in common: All died due to the coronavirus, yet none were recorded as suffering from COVID-19. Tanzania, a country famous for Serengeti safaris and a turquoise coastline, has engaged in a grim experiment with implications beyond its borders: denying the existence of COVID-19. How that is playing out offers clues on the hidden toll of the pandemic across the developing world.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“White House says Biden is ‘comfortable’ settling with families separated during Trump administration, but not for $450K” via Priscilla Alvarez and Maegan Vazquez of CNN — Biden is OK with the Justice Department settling with families separated at the U.S.-Mexico border under the Trump administration, White House principal deputy press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said on Thursday, but not for a reported $450,000 each. “If it saves taxpayer dollars and puts the disastrous history of the previous administration’s use of ‘zero tolerance’ and family separation behind us, the President is perfectly comfortable with the Department of Justice settling with the individuals and families who are currently in litigation with the U.S. government,” Jean-Pierre said during the White House press briefing. Biden said Wednesday that families separated at the border under the Trump administration’s so-called “zero-tolerance policy” will not receive payments of $450,000.
“Justice Dept. sues Texas over voting restrictions” via Reid J. Epstein and Nick Corasaniti of The New York Times — The Biden administration on Thursday sued Texas over the state’s new voting law, arguing that the Republican-passed measure would disenfranchise Texans who do not speak English, who have disabilities, who are older or who live outside the United States. The Texas voting restrictions, signed into law in September, include measures barring election officials from sending voters unsolicited absentee ballot applications and from promoting the use of vote by mail and further limiting the use of drop boxes. The Justice Department’s lawsuit appears to focus on those restrictions governing what types of help poll workers can offer voters, including translation and other assistance. The law creates new civil and criminal penalties for poll workers who run afoul of the rules.
“Biden aide tests positive for virus after summit in Scotland” via Jennifer Jacobs of Bloomberg — A White House aide who accompanied Biden to international summits in Europe last week tested positive for coronavirus infection before the President returned to the U.S., according to people familiar with the matter. The aide and some of Biden’s other traveling staff remained in Scotland after the President attended the United Nations climate summit in Glasgow because of concern about transmission, the people said. The exact number of staff involved is unclear. A White House official said that the aide tested positive via a rapid test is in quarantine in Scotland and awaiting a follow-up PCR test. The aide is not believed to have had close contact with the President. Biden himself tested negative on Tuesday, the official said Thursday evening.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“House Dems’ suburban foundation at risk of crumbling after Tuesday’s results” via Ally Mutnick and Elena Schneider of POLITICO — Democrats’ House majority — and their path to the White House in 2020 — was built in large part on suburban, college-educated voters who spurned Trump. But Youngkin’s inroads with them — carving deep into the northern Virginia counties where Democratic dominance in the last Governor’s race foretold the 2018 “blue wave” — proves Democrats’ support in those suburbs is soft. That’s especially true as Biden and congressional Democrats struggle to clinch a deal on their social spending packages and Republicans double down on culture war campaigns. “If Democrats can’t reclaim those suburban voters, I don’t see a path to keeping the majority, plain and simple,” Israel said, “and you reclaim them by talking about those issues that those voters are discussing at their kitchen table.”
“House Democrats hunt for votes to pass Biden’s domestic agenda” via Emily Cochrane of The New York Times — House Democrats struggled on Thursday to line up the votes needed to push through a $1.85 trillion social safety net, climate and tax bill, as moderates raised concerns about the cost and details of the rapidly evolving plan. Speaker Nancy Pelosi privately told her top deputies that she hoped to hold a vote on the bill as soon as Thursday night, with another on Friday morning to clear a Senate-passed $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure measure for Biden’s signature, according to two people briefed on the discussions. But as of midday Thursday, she was publicly noncommittal. “I will let you know as soon as I wish to,” she told reporters at her weekly news conference.
“In Spending Bill, Democrats rely on budget gimmicks they once derided” via Alan Rappeport of The New York Times — At an impromptu news conference this week, Sen. Joe Manchin lamented the “shell games” and “budget gimmicks,” he said his party was using to artificially reduce the $1.85 trillion price tag of the spending bill moving through Congress, saying the real cost was probably double that amount. Four years ago, as Republicans marched ahead with a $1.5 trillion tax cut, top Democrats in Congress assailed them for hiding the true cost of the legislation, arguing that it was “loaded with budget gimmicks” and packed with “stealthy tax tricks” that would saddle the nation with even more debt. Now, as they race to finish their own trillion-dollar domestic policy package, Democrats are employing their own maneuvers to downplay the cost of their bill.
“House Democrats are still planning to include immigration provisions in their social spending bill. They fall well short of a pathway to citizenship.” via POLITICO — House Democrats are pressing ahead with putting immigration reforms in their social spending mega bill. The latest draft text includes five-year work authorization and protections for undocumented immigrants — but without the long-sought goal of a pathway to citizenship many Democrats wanted. They need buy-in from the Senate parliamentarian, who would decide whether it could be included under the upper chamber’s rules. The parliamentarian has denied two of Democrats’ other proposals. “We need to focus on what we can actually get signed into law. Anything else is selling immigrants a false hope, and that’s unfair,” said U.S. Rep. Stephanie Murphy.
— CRISIS —
“Juror booted in Kyle Rittenhouse murder trial over Jacob Blake joke” via Bill Hutchinson of ABC News — A juror in the Rittenhouse murder trial in Wisconsin was booted from the case Thursday morning after he acknowledged that he told a tasteless joke to a deputy. The man, referred to as juror No. 7, was dismissed after being questioned by Kenosha County Circuit Judge Bruce Schroeder. The juror said his ill-attempt at humor was about Kenosha police officers shooting Blake, a 29-year-old Black man, in August 2020, which left Blake paralyzed and set off days of violent protests in Kenosha. “It appears that the appearance of bias is present, and it would seriously undermine the outcome of the case. So that in itself would be sufficient charge for discharge,” Schroeder told the juror.
“Capitol riot defendant who said she was ‘definitely not going to jail’ gets 60 days in prison” via Zoe Christen Jones of CBS News — Real estate broker Jennifer Leigh Ryan was sentenced Thursday to 60 days in prison for her role in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. In a private plane, the 51-year-old flew to the Capitol with a group of people from Denton, Texas and documented her involvement heavily on social media. Judge Christopher Cooper emphasized that Ryan was prosecuted for her actions inside the Capitol, not her political beliefs. “Your case has generated a fair amount of public interest,” Cooper said Thursday. “And as a result, people will be interested to know what sentence you get. That sentence will tell them something about how the courts and how our country responded. And I think that the sentence should tell them that we take it seriously … and that it should never happen again.”
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Feds charge Russian national who worked on Christopher Steele dossier with lying to FBI” via Alexander Mallin, Matthew Mosk and Luke Barr of The ABC News — A researcher who worked with Steele in assembling Steele’s controversial dossier that contained explosive and unproven claims about Trump has been arrested on charges stemming from the special counsel’s investigation of the Russia probe, according to an indictment made public Thursday. Igor Danchenko, a Russian national living in the U.S., has previously defended his role in gathering information that Steele used in his dossier, including the salacious claim that Russian officials may have had a videotape of Trump watching prostitutes in a hotel room during a 2013 trip to Moscow. Danchenko has been charged with five separate counts of making false statements to the FBI in interviews where he discussed how he obtained information that he later provided to Steele for inclusion in the dossier.
“Judge seems skeptical of Trump request to block House committee from Jan. 6 documents” via Pete Williams of NBC News — A federal judge appeared unwilling Thursday to block the release of scores of White House documents from the National Archives sought by the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Trump sued the committee and the National Archives, seeking to stop the process of handing over documents. He aims to prevent the first set of disputed documents from being turned over by a Nov. 12 deadline. Trump’s lawyers said the request for a wide range of documents is invalid because the committee can only seek material directly related to writing legislation. “Are you really saying the President’s notes, talking points, and records of telephone conversations on Jan. 6 have no bearing on the investigation?” asked U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan.
“Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance convenes new special grand jury to investigate Trump Organization” via John Santucci and Aaron Katersky of ABC News — Vance has convened a new special grand jury to hear evidence in the investigation of Trump and his eponymous company, sources familiar with the matter told ABC News. The new grand jury was convened as the time limit on the original special grand jury was about to expire. The new six-month special grand jury allows the case to continue beyond Vance’s tenure if needed. He leaves office in early Jan. when District Attorney-elect Alvin Bragg takes office. In a historic victory, Bragg was elected as Manhattan’s first Black district attorney on Tuesday. In June, the initial grand jury returned an indictment against the Trump Organization and its long-serving chief financial officer Allan Weisselberg. Both have pleaded not guilty.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Prosecutors: J.T. Burnette deserves ‘substantial’ prison term for corrupting Tallahassee political process” via Jeff Burlew of the Tallahassee Democrat — Federal prosecutors are seeking between six and a half and eight years in prison for Burnette, blasting the once-prominent business owner in court filings for using his “power and wealth to corrupt the political process.” Burnette, who was convicted in August on extortion and other charges in the FBI’s public corruption investigation, is scheduled to be sentenced Tuesday at the federal courthouse in Tallahassee. U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle could sentence him to anything from probation to 20 years in prison — both unlikely propositions. In a sentencing memo filed Tuesday, the government noted Burnette’s participation in a long-running bribery scheme involving former Mayor and City Commissioner Scott Maddox and his business and romantic partner, Paige Carter-Smith.
“No red tide reported at Pensacola Beach ahead of Blue Angels weekend shows” via Emma Kennedy of the Pensacola News Journal — Samples taken Tuesday at both Pensacola Beach and Navarre show no red tide is present in either area. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission reported that Navarre had low levels of the harmful algal bloom twice in recent weeks, sparking some concern among marine experts that red tide could crop up around Pensacola Beach coinciding with large crowds at the Blue Angels Homecoming Air Show. FWC’s data as of Thursday, though, showed there was no red tide present at the Pensacola Beach pier, nor at any of Escambia and Santa Rosa’s testing sites. The Destin and Fort Walton areas have been experiencing high blooms causing issues at those beaches, but experts say red tide doesn’t necessarily move across a coast in a certain pattern.
“Blue Angels pilot feels bittersweet about last show: ‘We’re all very excited’” via Emma Kennedy of the Pensacola News Journal — Blue Angels slot pilot James Cox isn’t quite ready to let go of his time on the team, despite Saturday marking his last time flying one of the jets over Pensacola Beach. Cox, a lieutenant commander with the U.S. Navy, has spent three years on the team and is thankful his final show can be as accessible as possible for the community after COVID-19 and security concerns caused uncertainty about where and when the homecoming show would be taking place. “It’s unfortunate we’re not able to be over our home turf proper here at NAS Pensacola, which we love very dearly. However, I think being out at Pensacola Beach is going to be incredible,” Cox said Thursday.
“Pensacola Police Department to tighten open container enforcement” via Brittany Misencik of the Pensacola News Journal — Downtown Pensacola may be known for barhopping, raging festivals and monthly Gallery Nights, but Pensacola police are planning to crack down on carrying alcohol around in public during unpermitted events. Pensacola’s city ordinance on open containers prohibits the possession or consumption of alcohol in public. This includes carrying or drinking alcohol in parks, playgrounds, sidewalks or other public places. Some events, such as Mardi Gras, Fiesta of Five Flags parades and Pensacola Gallery Nights, fall under the exception. Enforcement could also lead to more severe consequences than one might expect, such as hundreds of dollars in fines or even up to 60 days of jail time.
“‘Another avenue’: Could Walton County use eminent domain to obtain 3-acre Eastern Lake beach property?” via Tom McLaughlin of Northwest Florida Daily News — Nearly everyone at a recent Walton County Commission meeting agreed the county could not afford to miss out on the opportunity to purchase a 3-acre tract of beach property that would provide needed public beach access and help preserve a rare and imperiled coastal dune lake. Similarly, a near-unanimous consensus was that the $18 million price tag Peter Russell and his 187 San Roy Beach Holdings LLC had put on the property was too high. Jim Bagby, the county’s former Tourist Development Council director, suggested eminent domain as an alternative means to obtain the parcel. The county is in the process of getting appraisals for the property. The Walton County Property Appraiser’s website lists the just market value of the land at $3.1 million.
“Pilot uninjured after Tuskegee Airman P-51 crashes at Tallahassee airport; commercial air traffic grounded” via Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat — Commercial air travel at Tallahassee’s International Airport is likely to be on hold into Thursday evening after a vintage fighter plane crashed while landing. The P-51 Mustang, in Tallahassee as part of a traveling Tuskegee Airman Exhibit, left the runway while landing at about 2:15 p.m. The pilot is uninjured, and no fire or fuel leaks occurred following the impact, said TLH Deputy Director of Aviation Jim Durwin. “It basically went off the runway and came to rest on the side of the runway. There appears to be some damage to the landing gear,” Durwin said. “It’s in one piece,” Durwin said while officials work to clear the plane from the runway, all commercial air traffic in or out of Tallahassee is suspended.
“Tampa City Council approves funding for $108 million City Center at Hanna Avenue” via Daniel Figueroa of Florida Politics — Jane Castor pledged in her campaign to “bring government to communities.” And that, Deputy Administrator of Infrastructure Sal Ruggiero said, is exactly what the City Center at Hanna Avenue will do. “We wanted to be a government leader,” he told City Council members Thursday. “That’s why we chose East Tampa. Because we think we can put a spark in East Tampa that’ll change the lifestyle of some folks.” City Council Thursday unanimously funded the $108 million project at 2515 E. Hanna Ave. Council member Joe Citro was absent from the vote, but indicated it had his full support. The complex’s main building will be a 161,000 square-foot, three-story building set to house more than seven city departments.
“Rick Kriseman will ‘take steps’ to establish equity officer, despite voter rejection” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — In a Facebook post on Wednesday that was immediately met with heated commentary, St. Petersburg Mayor Kriseman said he planned to “take steps to establish” a Chief Equity Officer position “in keeping with our commitments to building a fairer St. Pete.” Critics quickly pounced. On Tuesday, voters rejected two charter amendments on the ballot, Amendment 3 and 4, that would have required “an equity framework” to address equity gaps, create a Chief Equity Officer position to lead the “equity action plan,” and, under Amendment 4, establish a funding source to pay for it. It’s important to note that the Mayor already has the power to create and eliminate positions. Amendment 3 would have required the position, whether an administration wanted them or not.
“Audubon Florida to Citrus County: Don’t weaken waterfront setback rules” via Mike Wright of Florida Politics — Florida Audubon sounds the alarm at the prospect of Citrus County Commissioners backing a plan to reduce waterfront setbacks for homes significantly. Citrus Commissioners have an 8 a.m. Tuesday workshop to discuss setbacks, which have been an on-and-off debate for several years. The County requires homes, porches, swimming pools (and the like) to be built 50 feet from the water’s edge, or 35 feet with a berm or swale to prevent runoff directly into the lake, river or canal. Clark Stillwell, an Inverness attorney who represents the interests of developers, suggested changes in the law to allow construction within 15 feet of a waterbody with an engineered stormwater drainage system and periodic inspections in the years that follow to ensure the system is still functioning.
— TOP OPINION —
“We work for the people of Florida. That’s why we can’t let the University of Florida silence us on a voting rights law.” via Sharon Austin, Michael McDonald and Daniel Smith for The Washington Post — Because of our experience and knowledge, we were hired as expert witnesses on a major voting rights case brought by the NAACP and numerous other nonprofit organizations against the Florida secretary of state and 67 elections supervisors over the new voting law, which the Brennan Center for Justice calls “an omnibus voter suppression bill that will make it harder for Floridians to vote.” We have worked on cases like this before without objection from university officials. But with SB 90, a piece of legislation that DeSantis signed into law live on Fox News; the university has offered a series of shifting rationales to justify blocking us from testifying. In our view, all the rationales reveal is a fear of retribution from political actors for our testimony.
— OPINIONS —
“Why has the University of Florida become DeSantis’ press office?” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — UF’s refusal to stand up for academic freedom is absolutely shameful. At least five more cases emerged this week where UF blocked or restricted its professors from engaging in disputes involving the state and DeSantis. The university tried to spin its decision, saying it objected only to requests for these employees “to undertake outside paid work that is adverse to the university’s interests.” But pay isn’t the issue; it’s that UF has censored speech to mollify the partisans who control state government. Few decisions have generated more public debate in Florida in recent years than the Republicans’ move to limit voting rights for felons and to restrict access to the ballot. And DeSantis’ battle against mask mandates to control COVID-19, which became a proxy war with the federal government, continues to carry public health and financial implications for the state.
“Republicans are winning elections because they won’t stop talking about this” via Tory Gavito and Adam Jentleson for The New York Times — Crucially, 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 Trump at arm’s length, as Youngkin did. Before Tuesday night, conventional wisdom held that racially coded attacks could well spur higher white turnout but that those gains would be offset by losses among minority voters. Youngkin proved this assumption false. He significantly outperformed other Republicans among white voters, especially women. This should terrify Democrats. With our democracy on the line, we have to forge an effective counterattack on race while rethinking the false choice between mobilizing base voters or persuading swing voters.
“Migrant ‘crisis’ at the border encapsulates the many challenges this region faces” via Miriam Davidson of the Miami Herald — Right now, we’re seeing record apprehensions of undocumented migrants and refugees, the majority of whom are immediately expelled or deported to uncertain fates. In September, we all saw the pictures of mounted patrolmen maneuvering their horses and long reins in an attempt to corral Haitian migrants along the Texas border. These photos evoked the ugliness of 19th-century “slave patrols” in the United States, as well as the enslavement of Haitians under French colonial rule in the 18th century. Less well known is that, so far this year, at least 190 sets of human remains have been found in Arizona’s deserts. Forty-three were found in June, the highest one-month total since July 2010. More than half the remains were discovered within one week of death.
“On climate, we need to run fast — but not run scared” via Fareed Zakaria of The Washington Post — Believe it or not, there is some real good news on the climate front. This week, approximately 100 countries announced an agreement to cut methane emissions 30% by 2030, closing a glaring gap in climate policy. They also reached a broad agreement to end deforestation in the same time frame, including pledging funds to back it up. Positive technological trends are also accelerating. Between 2009 and 2019, the cost of solar and wind power has declined by 89% and 70%, respectively. We need a rational way to think about climate policy, one that leaves us neither too scared to act nor too complacent to stand still.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Gov. DeSantis yet again announced plans to sue the Biden administration over vaccine mandates.
Also, on today’s #Sunrise:
— Records show the former felon who won the Republican Primary in Florida’s 20th Congressional District never applied for his second chance or the right to hold political office.
— University faculty from across the state are backing UF professors while calling on the university to back off.
— Today’s Sunrise interview is with the President of the United Faculty of Florida, Andrew Gothard who is speaking out against the University of Florida’s position that professors serving as expert witnesses in a case against the state pose a conflict of interest.
To listen, click on the image below:
— WEEKEND TV —
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFede on CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at politics in South Florida, along with other issues affecting the region.
Florida This Week on Tampa Bay’s WEDU: Rob Lorei hosts a roundtable with USF-St. Petersburg Professor Emeritus of Government and Politics Darryl Paulson, St. Petersburg College professor Tara Newsom, Tampa Bay Times St. Petersburg reporter Colleen Wright and Just Care USA President and Founder Diane Archer.
In Focus with Allison Walker on Bay News 9/CF 13: A discussion about the treatment and care of military veterans, including improving access to physical and mental health care, and assisting with the transition back to civilian life. Joining Walker are Rep. Paul Renner, Speaker-Designate of the House and U.S. Navy veteran; and Rep. Andrew Learned, U.S. Navy Reserve veteran.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: A look at Gov. DeSantis’ plan to strengthen election integrity; the latest on Biden’s vaccine mandate; and a recap of this week’s elections in St. Petersburg.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: Rep. Anna Eskamani will update on current legislation being discussed in Tallahassee, including changes to education funding that could be cut down on student loan debt, abortion bills similar to what Texas passed, and gun legislation.
The Usual Suspects on WCTV-Tallahassee/Thomasville (CBS) and WJHG-Panama City (NBC): Host Gary Yordon talks with Robert Blacklidge about Tallahassee’s Domi Station.
This Week in South Florida on WPLG-Local10 News (ABC): Broward Supervisor of Elections Joe Scott.
— ALOE —
“Daylight saving time ends Sunday. Four ways to win the transition.” via Alina Dizik of The Wall Street Journal — Go to bed early(ish). Use the extra hour to get to sleep at your usual time, no matter what the clock says. Start right. Use the early wakeups to go for a walk or get some exercise before starting the workday. Turn in, tone down. Eating dinner earlier, around 6 p.m., can make bedtime calmer. Lock screens. With less daylight and chillier nights, screen time can be especially disruptive to sleep. When used in the evening, the light from screens can interfere with natural melatonin production. Some experts recommend changing device settings to dark mode once the sun goes down.
“Disney bucks overseas censors, refuses to cut gay couple from Eternals” via Matt Schimkowitz of A.V. Club — Despite pushback from censors in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Qatar, Disney refuses to cut the same-sex couple featured in the upcoming Marvel superhero movie Eternals. The film, which was to open in the Gulf region on Nov. 11, will not be premiering in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, or Qatar due to Disney’s refusal to bend to the countries’ anti-LGBTQIA+ laws. Censors in several Persian Gulf countries requested edits to the film to cut a kiss between the character Phastos and his husband, Ben. As a result, the film is no longer listed as “coming soon” on various websites in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Qatar. It is, however, still slated for release in the UAE.
“‘It was insane’: Mary Esther man stunt doubles for Bruce Willis, lands role in AMC series” via Savannah Evanoff of Northwest Florida Daily News — It pays to have the same stature and hairstyle, or lack thereof, as actor Willis. At least it did for Cody Longshore, who played his stunt double three weeks ago. It was only one among several new ventures for the 5-foot, 11-inch tall and bald Mary Esther resident, who recently acted in the upcoming TV series “In with the Devil.” … “Apparently, his normal body stunt double wasn’t able to make it, and they were looking for someone bald, the same height, same weight, everything, and my photo came across,” Longshore said. “They were like, ‘Now look, we know you’re very young, but it’s mostly drone shots, stunt driving, and some other shots that you won’t be able to tell that you’re so young.”
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Celebrating today are U.S. Rep. Frederica Wilson, Britton Alexander, Emma Collum, former state Rep. Ken Robertson, Eric Robinson.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Happy Friday. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,188 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
🎖️ Broadcast networks will break in at noon ET with coverage of the funeral for Gen. Colin Powell at the Washington National Cathedral.
Illustration: Allie Carl/Axios
Rival vaccine makers are trying to elbow into the massive COVID-19 market, arguing for federal funding and claiming advantages over the current choices in the U.S., Axios health care editor Tina Reed reports.
- Why it matters: There’s huge remaining demand around the world, and researchers say there should be more support from the Biden administration — including money — to fill it.
State of play: Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson developed highly effective vaccines at record speed, and have produced more than enough doses to vaccinate every American.
- But the rest of the world isn’t getting the doses it needs from the U.S. Because of new variants, it’s in America’s interests to get as much of the world vaccinated as quickly as possible.
New competitors say they can help fill that gap. But not without the kind of intense investments that helped the Big 3 get there.
- Researchers say they’ve got candidates that are more scalable than the mRNA vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna, and don’t require the same cold storage.
The other side: A senior Biden administration health official told Axios that Operation Warp Speed, now the Countermeasures Acceleration Group, is working with other vaccine developers.
CNN’s John King is shown at his Magic Wall during an election-night event for Gov. Phil Murphy in Asbury Park, N.J., on Tuesday. Photo: Angus Mordant/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute on the Jersey Shore, writes an op-ed for The (Newark) Star-Ledger apologizing for a poll six days before the election that said Gov. Phil Murphy “maintains a sizable lead” over Republican Jack Ciattarelli.
- The poll had Murphy up by 11. The race wasn’t called until Wednesday evening. With 99% of the vote in, Murphy is up by 1 point.
Murray, who has headed polling since 2005, writes that if you’re “a Republican who believes the polls cost Ciattarelli an upset victory or a Democrat who feels we lulled your base into complacency, feel free to vent. I hear you”:
I owe an apology to Jack Ciattarelli’s campaign — and to Phil Murphy’s campaign for that matter — because inaccurate public polling can have an impact on fundraising and voter mobilization efforts. But most of all I owe an apology to the voters of New Jersey for information that was at the very least misleading.
What we’re watching: “If we cannot be certain that these polling misses are anomalies,” the pollster writes, “then we have a responsibility to consider whether releasing horse race numbers in close proximity to an election is making a positive or negative contribution to the political discourse.”
Cover: The Economist
Looking ahead to 2022 and 2024, The Economist writes that Dems’ “unpopularity with non-college-educated whites costs them large tracts of the country outside cities and suburbs”:
To win the electoral college, the House of Representatives and the Senate they need a greater share of the raw vote than any party in history. Winning under these conditions, while simultaneously repairing national institutions and making progress on America’s problems, from public health to climate to social mobility, is a task for a politician of superhuman talents.
Read the leader (subscription).
Peloton slashed its full-year sales forecast by up to $1 billion, saying demand for its exercise bikes and treadmills was slowing faster than expected as people return to pre-pandemic habits, Reuters reports.
- “It is clear that we underestimated the reopening impact on our company and the overall industry,” chief financial officer Jill Woodworth said on a post-earnings call.
What’s happening: Rising vaccinations and easing curbs have encouraged people to go back to gyms this year, hitting Peloton’s growth and boosting the earnings of chains like Planet Fitness.
- Peloton has tried to cushion the blow by cutting the price of its original bike by $400 and ramping up its ad spending.
Peloton expects to have 3.45 million connected fitness subscriptions by the end of the fiscal year, per Bloomberg.
Igor Danchenko, a Russian analyst hired to compile key parts of the infamous “Steele dossier” of alleged ties between the 2016 Trump campaign and Russia, was indicted yesterday on five counts of lying to the FBI about his sources.
- Why it matters: Special counsel John Durham alleges that the FBI used Danchenko’s faulty information to obtain a surveillance warrant on a Trump campaign aide.
The big picture: This is the third indictment Durham has obtained since he began investigating the origins of the Russia probe in May 2019.
- Trump allies have long claimed that Durham’s revelations would expose the Russia investigation as a politically motivated “witch hunt,” and bring down top Obama administration officials like former FBI Director James Comey.
- Those charges have not materialized.
Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios
Digital purchases like game downloads and App Store credits are hot holiday gifts as the world confronts shipping delays and product shortages, Axios’ Ina Fried writes in her “Signal Boost” column.
- Digital goods are in infinite supply, obviating the need to check multiple stores, wait for packages and deal with other hassles. And there are more options than ever, ranging from games to video service subscriptions to credits for Roblox, Fortnite or the App Store.
State of play: Game consoles have been hard to come by for many months — including the latest Xbox and PlayStation models, but also other devices like the Nintendo Switch and Oculus Quest.
What’s next: The new frontier of digital goods includes collectibles, like NFTs (non-fungible tokens) — as well as all those virtual outfits your avatar will need to be stylish in the coming metaverse.
New Jersey’s longtime state Senate president, Democrat Steve Sweeney, lost re-election, falling to a Republican furniture company truck driver who spent $2,300 on the race, AP reports.
- Edward Durr, 58, won by 4 points (32,497 votes to 30,268 — 52% to 48%) in a politically competitive suburban Philadelphia district (parts of Cumberland, Gloucester and Salem counties), as Republicans gained across the state.
Montclair State University political scientist Brigid Harrison said: “Steve was, in many ways, just how people voiced their dissatisfaction and anger with the larger political structure.”
American Girl dolls, the strategy board game “Risk” and sand — plain sand — were inducted yesterday into the National Toy Hall of Fame, housed at The Strong National Museum of Play in Rochester, N.Y.:
- The 18-inch American Girl dolls “explore America’s social and cultural history. Each historical doll comes with a unique narrative that fits her era, such as Molly McIntire, who is waiting for her father to return home from World War II.”
- “Based on the French game Le Conquete du Monde, Risk translates the hobby of wargaming with miniature figures into a mass-produced war and strategy board game. First published in the United States in 1959, Risk challenges players to control armies and conquer the world.”
- Educator Maria Montessori has noted that sand is a “substance that the modern child is allowed to handle quite freely.”
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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
CPS facilities chief out amid dirty schools complaints
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
House Democrats planned to vote Friday on their sweeping budget reconciliation package after moving to iron out a handful of unresolved issues. The chamber was also slated to take up a separate bipartisan infrastructure bill to provide $550 billion in new spending. Read more…
Senate Republicans on Thursday again boycotted a committee vote to advance Dilawar Syed to be deputy administrator of the Small Business Administration, stalling action on a nominee who would be the highest-ranking Muslim in the Biden administration amid accusations of bigotry from some groups. Read more…
House Democrats, Republicans clash over Texas abortion law
Questions about the role of government in abortion policy arose during a House hearing Thursday, days after the Supreme Court heard oral arguments challenging a Texas abortion law. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Leahy says GOP intransigence on spending threatens defense
Senate Appropriations Chairman Patrick J. Leahy called out Republicans on Thursday, accusing them of pushing Congress toward a full-year continuing resolution that would fund the government at levels set last year, thereby shortchanging one of the GOP’s stated priorities: national security. Read more…
Senate confirms new Census Bureau director
The Senate approved the first Latino director to head the Census Bureau, confirming Robert Santos to the director’s post following a bipartisan 58-35 vote Thursday. Santos received unanimous support from Democrats and the votes of a handful of Republicans. Read more…
Judge questions Trump push to block records from Jan. 6 panel
A federal judge sounded skeptical Thursday of former President Donald Trump’s request to halt a House select committee from getting most of the White House records it has requested in an investigation into the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by his supporters. Read more…
‘Huge trouble’: Voters punish Democrats for blind spots on kitchen table issues
ANALYSIS — President Joe Biden wrapped a climate crisis conference in Europe by warning that the warming planet is melting the Russian Arctic desert. Back home, Virginia and New Jersey voters seemed to care about other issues on Election Day. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Let’s try this again
DRIVING THE DAY
BIF/BBB LATEST — The House adjourned just after 10 p.m. on Thursday night as Speaker NANCY PELOSI and her leadership team struggled to round up votes to pass the twin infrastructure and Build Back Better bills. Democratic leadership announced the House will be back in session at 8 a.m. and votes would happen today.
Our Nicholas Wu, Sarah Ferris and Heather Caygle posted a detailed state of play late Thursday night, writing that “senior Democrats privately believed they would have the votes” to pass BBB: “The planned Friday votes come after Pelosi and her leadership team spent a chaotic Thursday hustling to narrow the number of holdouts on the sweeping bill. Democrats made progress in three key areas: They reached a deal on repealing a Trump-era limit on state and local tax deductions, resolved concerns on immigration reform and convinced moderates to back a slightly altered drug pricing deal.
“But Democratic leaders are still facing resistance from centrists who’ve raised procedural concerns, such as the lack of cost analysis, with the push for a vote on the sprawling social policy package this week. Pelosi circulated a letter Thursday night that included budgetary details from White House staff, but several Democrats say they want the details from Congress’s independent scorekeepers, not a partisan office.”
— One reason for Democrats to be optimistic today: “[M]any in the caucus are set to embark on overseas trips ahead of next week’s recess.” A deadline, in other words, could help push them to act.
— One reason for Democrats to be pessimistic: “But party leaders’ failure to corral the votes they need on Thursday — after several exhausting weeks spent hashing out many of the same issues — has left some Democrats privately wondering how they’ll pull it off on Friday.”
Even if Pelosi succeeds in getting BBB through the House, Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) is going “to change it anyway,” Marianne LeVine and Burgess Everett write. “Manchin is making it clear that he’s not paying much attention to what the House is crafting, memorably saying Wednesday that he has ‘no idea’ what they are doing.”
Meanwhile, NYT’s Emily Cochrane and Jonathan Weisman report that President JOE BIDEN — who left Democratic leaders flabbergasted last week when he declined to press rank-and-file members for an imminent vote — is now fully engaged in the whipping effort. “Biden made personal calls on Thursday, as did PETE BUTTIGIEG, the transportation secretary, who reached out to at least one Democrat facing a tough re-election.”
HERE’S WHAT ELSE I’M GATHERING …
- Virginia Gov.-elect GLENN YOUNGKIN, one of the wealthiest pols in the country, passed over a slew of glossy D.C. ad firms to hire a scrappy upstart, the Virginia-based Poolhouse. With a team of just 20 people, co-founders WILL RITTER and TIM O’TOOLE cut 42 ads for Youngkin out of an old warehouse space in Richmond. We hear their phones have been blowing up since Youngkin’s win. Ritter was so eager to score the business that he pitched Youngkin shortly after his wife gave birth to their second child. Ritter changed into a suit at the hospital, made the presentation to the campaign and then returned to his wife and newborn. The inspiration for “Poolhouse” came after the two founders, then MITT ROMNEY staffers, took a rare weekend off during the 2012 campaign to rent a pool house in Nantucket, where they pledged that one day they would open their own firm.
- DONALD TRUMP’s orbit is anxiously awaiting Pennsylvania Senate candidate SEAN PARNELL’s testimony Tuesday in the ugly custody battle with his wife. Trump endorsed Parnell in early September at the urging of DONALD TRUMP JR. But now another candidate is considering entering the race: DAVID MCCORMICK, the husband of former Trump White House official DINA POWELL. (Read POLITICO’s scoop on this Thursday night.) McCormick is a financier who runs the massive hedge fund Bridgewater Associates. A veteran of the Gulf War, he also served as a Treasury Department official during the Bush administration. A person close to Trump told me McCormick’s entry “would shake things up.” While Trump is unlikely to rescind an endorsement, some close to the former president said they could see a scenario in which he endorses two candidates.
- “The Trump government in exile,” as one attendee described it, gathered at Mar-a-Lago for the America First Policy Institute fundraiser Thursday. Guests at the season’s first major Mar-a-Lago money-making bash included MARK MEADOWS, former acting A.G. MATT WHITAKER, Rep. LAUREN BOEBERT (R-Colo.) in a “Let’s Go Brandon” dress, Sen. LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-S.C.), LARRY KUDLOW, KELLYANNE CONWAY, SEAN SPICER, Rep. MATT GAETZ (R-Fla.), ANDREW WHEELER, CHAD WOLF and LINDA MCMAHON. Even JARED KUSHNER attended, despite a June report from CNN that he and IVANKA TRUMP had distanced themselves from Trump.
- While some of the biggest talent at Fox News have skeptical views of Covid-19 vaccines, News Corp. honcho RUPERT MURDOCH is not messing around. At his 90th birthday party last week at Tavern on the Green, guests not only had to show proof of vaccination, they had to get a rapid nose swab test in order to enter.
- BETO O’ROURKE is close to announcing his entry into the race for Texas governor, something he hinted at in a September interview with the Texas Tribune. A source close to him said he’s still firming up who will run the campaign and its finances, but expect an announcement in the coming weeks. Adviser DAVID WYSONG said: “No decision has been made. He has been making and receiving calls with people from all over the state.”
- It’s hard to imagine FX’s “Impeachment” series without MONICA LEWINSKY as a driving force behind it, but at one point executive producer RYAN MURPHY considered not bringing her on as a consultant and producer, two sources familiar with the matter told Daniel Lippman and me. One of those sources said Murphy was looking at another script with a less flattering portrayal of Lewinsky that was more focused on her relationship with LINDA TRIPP. But Murphy was persuaded that not bringing Lewinsky on board would look like he was taking advantage of her in the midst of the #MeToo movement. A spox for Murphy told us: “There’s only ever been one script. He always wanted Monica and loves her and loved working with her.” Despite the much-hyped rollout, the series hasn’t done great ratings-wise, which the NYT attributed to a lack of availability on streaming networks.
- Their families had their differences, but first children CAROLINE KENNEDY and LUCY JOHNSON broke bread at the Metropolitan Museum of Art on Thursday night to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the White House Historical Association Gala. While Kennedy told the crowd about how her mother, JACKIE KENNEDY, founded the association, they sat under the ancient Egyptian Temple of Dendur, which was donated to the museum by Lucy’s father, LYNDON B. JOHNSON. First lady JILL BIDEN offered her impressions of living in the White House after FRED RYAN admitted to having read her “Rate My Professor” profile. (He said the reviews were all great.) Also spotted: Adrienne Arsht, Mark Foley, Al Roker, Deborah Roberts, Martin Indyk, Gahl Burt, Bonnie McElveen-Hunter, Kevin Chaffee and Wilbur and Hilary Ross.
Happy Friday. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
THE STRATEGISTS WHO MADE THE ‘YOUNGKIN REPUBLICAN’ — For the first time in 12 years, a Republican won the governorship in Virginia. And it wasn’t just any victory — to claim the seat, Youngkin had to beat TERRY MCAULIFFE, former governor and Democratic royalty. Ryan digs into the narrow win with Youngkin campaign strategists JEFF ROE and KRISTIN DAVISON, and the mistakes they think McAuliffe’s campaign made. Plus, senior politics editor Charlie Mahtesian on the significant places Youngkin gained the most votes. Listen and subscribe to Playbook Deep Dive … More in POLITICO Magazine
BIDEN’S FRIDAY:
— 9:30 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 10:15 a.m.: Biden will deliver remarks on the October jobs report.
— 12 p.m.: The Bidens will attend the funeral service for COLIN POWELL at the Washington National Cathedral.
— Evening: Biden will depart the White House for Rehoboth Beach, Del.
VP KAMALA HARRIS’ FRIDAY: The VP will tour the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., at 4:05 p.m. and deliver remarks at 4:45 p.m., where she will announce that she will chair her first meeting of the National Space Council on Dec. 1. The council was revived by Trump in 2017 to craft space policy but has yet to meet during the Biden presidency. She will be joined by NASA Administrator BILL NELSON.
Principal deputy press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE will brief at 2:30 p.m.
The HOUSE will meet at 9 a.m., with last votes scheduled for 3 p.m.
The SENATE is out.
PLAYBOOK READS
ALL POLITICS
NEW RNC FINANCE CHAIR — Alex Isenstadt scoops this morning that TODD RICKETTS is stepping down from his post as RNC finance chair. “Ricketts will be succeeded by DUKE BUCHAN, a Florida-based investor who served as ambassador to Spain under former President Donald Trump. Buchan is set to assume the post in January.” Ricketts, part of one of the most prominent GOP donor families, replaced STEVE WYNN in the post in 2018.
NOT A GOOD LOOK — Arizona gubernatorial candidate KARI LAKE, who was endorsed by Trump, posed for photographs and videos with Nazi sympathizers and people linked to QAnon, CNN’s Em Steck and Andrew Kaczynski report.
FLORIDA NO LONGER A SWING STATE? — The Democratic Governors Association isn’t planning to make a significant financial play to unseat Florida Gov. RON DESANTIS next year, Matt Dixon reports. It’s a stark acknowledgment of DeSantis’ popularity and Democrats’ declining fortunes in the once-perennial swing state, where — just three years after DeSantis won by a margin so narrow that the race went to a recount — Democrats now face a “crisis of confidence.” For its part, the DGA is instead focusing its 2022 efforts on shoring up Democratic incumbents in other states.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — After Dems’ rough showings in Virginia and New Jersey, The States Project is convening a group of major donors and lawmakers Sunday to discuss a $31 million effort to help Dems craft a message to win statehouses in 2022. We’re told the virtual meetup organized by the group — which focuses on building a bigger bench of progressives in state legislatures — was in the works before this week’s elections, but kicked into overdrive after the party’s poor performance.
WHITE HOUSE
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The White House is deploying Jill Biden on a nationwide tour starting Monday to urge parents to vaccinate their kids ages 5-11. She’s kicking off the push at a historic site: Franklin Sherman Elementary School in McLean, Va., the first school to administer the polio vaccine in 1954.
JUDICIARY SQUARE
TAKING ON TEXAS — The Department of Justice sued Texas over its restrictive new voting law, signed by Republican Gov. GREG ABBOTT in September, arguing it “would disenfranchise several groups of vulnerable Texans, including voters who do not speak English and those with disabilities,” NYT’s Reid Epstein, Nick Corasaniti and Katie Benner report. “The department argues that the law violates the Voting Rights Act by limiting the help that poll workers can provide to voters.” Abbott responded on Twitter: “Bring it. The Texas election integrity law is legal.” He added it was “easier to vote but harder to cheat” in Texas.
JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH
TRUMP LOSES ROUND ON DOCUMENTS FIGHT — A federal judge on Thursday “appeared unwilling to block the release of scores of White House documents from the National Archives sought by the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol,” a move requested by Trump’s legal team. NBC’s Pete Williams has more.
GETTING DOWN TO BUSINESS — Twice in the past week, the House select committee on Jan. 6 has interviewed a rioter with knowledge of “contacts between GOP officials in a key state Trump lost and allies of the former president in the weeks leading up to the Jan. 6 attack,” Kyle Cheney reports. “The person interviewed was one of the 650-plus defendants charged in the attack, and discussed those contacts in a voluntary interview with congressional investigators.”
TRUMP CARDS
NEW GRAND JURY IN TRUMP ORG CASE, via WaPo’s Shayna Jacobs, David Fahrenthold and Jonathan O’Connell: “The Manhattan district attorney has convened a second long-term grand jury to hear evidence about the Trump Organization’s financial practices and potentially to vote on criminal charges, according to people with knowledge of the matter. An earlier grand jury returned felony indictments against two Trump companies and Trump’s longtime chief financial officer ALLEN WEISSELBERG, charging them with tax evasion.”
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week”: Nikole Hannah-Jones, Eva McKend, Kelly O’Donnell and Dave Wasserman.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
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FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Leon Panetta. Panel: House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) and Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.). Panel: Marc Short, Catherine Lucey and Juan Williams. Power Player: Chris Wallace will receive the Panetta Institute’s Jefferson-Lincoln Award.
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CBS
“Face the Nation”: Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) … Fred Smith … Scott Gottlieb. Panel: John Dickerson and Amy Walter.
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MSNBC
“The Sunday Show”: DNC Chair Jaime Harrison … Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger … David Hogg … Sheryl Lee Ralph … Pennsylvania state Sen. Vincent Hughes … Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-N.Y.).
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NBC
“Meet the Press”: New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern. Panel: Peter Baker, Sara Fagen, Joshua Johnson and Amna Nawaz.
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ABC
“This Week”: Panel: Rick Klein, Donna Brazile, Sarah Isgur and Robert Costa.
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CNN
“Inside Politics”: Panel: Jeff Zeleny, Margaret Talev, Asma Khalid, John Bresnahan and Neil Irwin.
PLAYBOOKERS
Nikki Haley said politicians of a certain advanced age should be required to undergo mental health screening. She definitely was referring to Biden. Unclear whether she meant Trump, too.
Jeff Bezos “just shelled out $78 million for a massive Hawaiian estate spanning over 14 acres,” per the N.Y. Post. But his splurge is reportedly just beginning — and locals are worried.
Tucker Carlson said he has a greater understanding of America’s opioid epidemic after receiving large doses of painkillers for emergency back surgery.
Eric Adams says he’ll take his first three paychecks as mayor in bitcoins, in order to demonstrate that “NYC is going to be the center of the cryptocurrency industry.”
Kyrsten Sinema took to Insta to post about her upcoming triathlete season: “Here’s hoping 2022 has fewer surgeries and injuries and more rad adventures!”
A Popeyes on Capitol Hill was shut down after a disgusting TikTok video posted by a guy who delivered chicken to the restaurant went viral.
For $10,800, you can have dinner with J.D. Vance and tech billionaire Peter Thiel.
AT YOUR SERVICE LADIES: Male members of Congress took shifts guest bartending on Wednesday night at Julie Conway’s Value In Electing Women PAC 24th Annual Guest Bartender reception in appreciation of their female colleagues in the House and Senate, including Sens. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) and Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.). Among those aspiring GOP mixologists: Reps. Tom Emmer (Minn.), Andy Barr (Ky.), Mario Diaz-Balart (Fla.), Ron Estes (Kan.), Drew Ferguson (Ga.), Andrew Garbarino (N.Y.), David Joyce (Ohio), John Joyce (Pa.), John Katko (N.Y.), Dan Newhouse (Wash.) and Pete Stauber (Minn.). And the GOP ladies who drank it up: Reps. Kat Cammack (Fla.), Ashley Hinson (Iowa), Young Kim (Calif.), Michelle Steel (Calif), Jackie Walorski (Ind.), Julia Letlow (La.), Lisa McClain (Mich.), Mariannette Miller-Meeks (Iowa), Nicole Malliotakis (N.Y.), Claudia Tenney (N.Y.), Stephanie Bice (Okla.), Nancy Mace (S.C.), Maria Elvira Salazar (Fla.), Diana Harshbarger (Tenn.), Beth Van Duyne (Texas), Carol Miller (W.Va.) and Yvette Herrell (N.M.).
SPOTTED at a party Wednesday night at Pearl Street Warehouse for David Drucker’s new book, “In Trump’s Shadow: The Battle for 2024 and the Future of the GOP” ($14.99): Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.), Josh Kraushaar, Tom LoBianco, Sam Feist, Colin Reed and Andrea Woods, Ron Bonjean, Matt Lewis and Erin DeLullo, Alex and Caitlin Conant, Ben Jacobs, Lisa Spies, Jeremy Adler, Nihal Krishan, Matt Gorman, Brett O’Donnell and Alex Burgos. (h/t Daniel Lippman)
SPOTTED at an annual event for the Italian American Democratic Leadership Council at Festa Italiana on Thursday night honoring Speaker Nancy Pelosi: Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), Reps. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.), Suzanne Bonamici (D-Ore.), Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) and Joseph Morelle (D-N.Y.), Joseph Paolino, James Rosapepe, Art Gajarsa, John Calvelli, Bob Blancato and John Podesta.
MEDIA MOVE — Katharine Schwab is joining BuzzFeed as deputy tech editor. She previously was deputy tech editor at Fast Company.
STAFFING UP — Sean Bartlett is now a senior adviser in the Bureau of Global Public Affairs at the State Department. He previously was comms director at the Center for Global Development and is a Senate Foreign Relations Committee alum.
TRANSITIONS — Ralph Leslie has been appointed EVP and COO of the Pew Charitable Trusts. He currently is CFO and dean of finance and business operations for the Weinberg College of Arts & Sciences at Northwestern University. Announcement … Kevin Wu will be domestic policy adviser for Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.). He previously was a health policy analyst for the Prevention Initiative at the Bipartisan Policy Center. … Virginia Gum Hamisevicz is now VP of government affairs and international programs at the Aluminum Association. She most recently was VP of government affairs at the National Mining Association. …
… Brent Johnson and Maya Rao are joining Civic Nation. Johnson will be chief of staff, and most recently was deputy director of advance and operations to second gentleman Doug Emhoff. Rao will be chief partnerships and philanthropy officer, and most recently was development director at the Human Rights Campaign. … Jesse Overton has joined Google as policy marketing manager. He previously was senior comms adviser in the NYC Mayor’s Office of Public Engagement, and is a Heidi Heitkamp alum.
WEDDING — Eliza Collins, a politics reporter for the WSJ and a POLITICO alum, and Michael Levenson, an account executive at Cross Screen Media, got married Friday in Phoenix. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. Frederica Wilson (D-Fla.) … New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu … Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers (7-0) … Valerie Biden Owens … John Harwood … NBC’s Ken Strickland and Jason Calabretta … Heather Stone … POLITICO’s Katy O’Donnell … Justin Muzinich … L.A. Times’ Nolan McCaskill … Steve Pfister … Benjamin Wittes of Brookings and Lawfare … Stephen Rubright … WaPo’s Kevin Sullivan … Keith Castaldo of Subject Matter … Trudy Vincent … Annie Kelly Kuhle of FP1 Strategies … Steve Caldeira of the Household & Commercial Products Association … Max Eden … Moira Whelan of the National Democratic Institute … Katie Oyama … Accenture’s Matt Nicholson … former Rep. Bob Barr (R-Ga.) … Brian Lawrence … Jane Timken … Autumn VandeHei … Zack Marshall … Kristin Bodenstedt … John Procter of Avisa Partners … Chris Mewett … Ryan Mewett … Malik Haughton … Rick Leach … Craig Kirby … Karen Mulhauser
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Virginia Election Broke Democrats Worse Than Trump Did
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Friday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Join me for some funnel cakes on the south 40 of my alpaca ranch.
The last couple of days have certainly provided some interesting political theater, haven’t they? Even I’m having a good time and I’m pretty much dead inside when it comes to politics.
For the last year, we’ve watched the Democrats not handle winning very well. Nothing is ever good enough for them. Since they can’t even win gracefully, it was obviously going to get rough and ugly when they first lost again.
I’ve written many times that I believe that Donald Trump broke the Democrats in 2016. Their midterm gains in 2018 and whatever the heck happened last year didn’t fix them even a little bit. They’ve been teetering on the edge of a steep cliff, just waiting for a little push.
Virginia seems to have given them that nudge.
The post-mortem hot takes have begun in earnest and I have to say that this is a level of flailing that is usually only seen when a party gets shellacked in a national election, not after a bad night in just one state. My favorite assessment so far was offered by America’s Dumbest Bartender, which Robert wrote about:
Any sane person realizes that the Virginia gubernatorial election was in effect a referendum on the gallop toward socialism that Old Joe Biden and his handlers have taken the country on since Jan. 20 and knows that race-baiting and the repudiation of parental authority are not a winning formula. But when we’re talking about rational and reality-based assessments, that leaves out Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-Trotsky), who has her own analysis of why the socialist, authoritarian Democrats crashed and burned in Virginia on Tuesday: they weren’t Leftist enough.
With a straight face, the erudite Congresswoman explained: “I know that Virginia was a huge bummer. And honestly, if anything, I think that the results show the limits of trying to run a fully 100% super-moderated campaign that does not excite, speak to, or energize a progressive base. And frankly, we weren’t even really invited to contribute on that race.”
This is the first time I’ve ever said this, but I really hope that the Democrats listen to her now and follow her off into commie oblivion.
After spending the first 24 hours after the election pretending that Virginia Republicans didn’t elect a Black woman to the second-highest office in the commonwealth, mainstream media hacks went full-metal stupid trying to diminish the significance.
MSNBC host Joy Reid said Virginia’s Republican voters should get no credit for electing a person of color because her opponent — Democrat Hala Ayala — also is a person of color.
“What Republicans are now doing is they basically demand credit any time any of them ever voted for anybody Black or if there’s a Black guy on the Supreme Court that’s conservative,” Reid claimed. “Any Black conservative is supposedly or the Black president having ever been elected, right? The fact that he was elected, period, means there’s no racism. So you had a choice of two Brown/Black people and you picked one of them. Do you get credit? Do you get special credit?”
Michael Eric Dyson, a professor and noted left-wing racialist, naturally agreed with Reid’s warped analysis and added some delusional bigotry.
“The problem is here they want White supremacy by ventriloquist effect. There is a Black mouth moving but a White idea running on the runway of the tongue of a figure who justifies and legitimates the White supremacist practices,” Dyson ranted. “We know that we can internalize in our own minds, in our own subconscious, in our own bodies the very principles that are undoing us. So to have a Black face speaking in behalf of a White supremacist legacy is nothing new. And it is to the chagrin of those of us who study race that the White folk on the other side and the right wingers the other side don’t understand.”
Their emotional torture delights me in ways I can’t even begin to describe.
Democrats are going through so much anguish right now because they know what the Republican victories in Virginia really mean: their tired narratives got blown all to hell and they learned the hard way that reflexively barking “TRUMP!” isn’t a real political strategy. Once more, with feeling: voters are more motivated by having something to vote for rather than against.
The 2021 Democrats aren’t offering the American electorate anything beyond the fact that they hate Donald Trump.
Let’s not tell them that he won’t be on the ballot next year.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
VodkaPundit: Facebook: ‘We’ll Quit Using Facial Recognition’ (Not Really!)
The Intentional Destabilization of America
Democrats Seek to Build Back Better…on the Backs of Vapers?
Public Interest Legal Foundation Sues Over 26,000 Dead People on Michigan Voter Rolls
Meltdown: Winsome Sears’ Victory in Virginia Has Sent Dems Over the Edge
A Bad Joke Gets Rittenhouse Juror Tossed From Jury
Is It Time for the Butlerian Jihad?
Nikki Haley Assails Socialism, Celebrates Republican Wins
AOC: Dems Lost in Virginia Because They Weren’t Far Enough to the Left
Rand Paul Slams Dr. Anthony Fauci Again as Criticism of ‘America’s Doctor’ Mounts
BeagleGate: Another Cruel Puppy Experiment from Fauci’s NIAID Exposed
Did Youngkin Win Virginia or Did Biden, Harris, McAuliffe, and the Woke Mob Lose It?
Liberal Doctor Gives Liberal Readers Straight Talk on COVID
Joe Biden on McAuliffe’s Defeat: Don’t Blame Me
Did Youngkin Really Win a Stunning Majority of Latino Voters in Virginia?
LOL make it stop. Kinzinger Mulls Presidential Run
Audit Claims Wisconsin May Have Counted Enough Illegal Votes to Flip State to Biden
‘People Don’t Like Them’: James Carville Has a Stern Warning for Woke Democrats
Well, they’re idiots so…Never Trump Republicans Take the Wrong Message From Virginia
Biden Claims the U.S. Was Never Going to Pay Illegals $450K For Being Separated at Border
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: After Being Humiliated In VA, Democrats Tell the Voters to Kiss-Off
Ron DeSantis Fires Back Against Biden’s Unconstitutional OSHA Vaccine Mandate
MSNBC Fill-In Host Says Democrats Should Focus on This Instead…It’s Totally Wrong
Terry McAuliffe Made Abortion a Major Campaign Issue, and It Backfired
Second Amendment Sanctuaries Key To GOP Sweep In VA
Cam&Co. Could The NY Carry Case Spell Doom For California Gun Control Laws?
ABC News Questions Why Minorities Are Buying Guns
Guess Which Network Aired the First Black Female Lt. Governor’s Speech…Guess Which Ones Didn’t
Under Biden’s ‘Leadership’ US Labor Productivity Suffers Worst Decline in 40 Years
Indiana School Administrator Blows Lid off Deceptive Tactics Behind Push for CRT in Classrooms
“What the heck is all this other stuff”: Dems revolting on reconciliation?
Thune: Senators don’t care what Meghan Markle thinks about paid family leave
Rev. Al Sharpton: Yeah, we might need to dial back those calls for defunding the police
Tom Nichols seems pretty grumpy about that Republican truck driver who won a New Jersey senate seat
VIP
VodkaPundit, Part Deux: Italy Makes a Stunning Announcement About COVID-19 Death Toll
Hear Me Out: Donald J. Trump Shouldn’t Run in 2024
Did the Associated Press Call the New Jersey Governor’s Race Too Soon?
Is This the End of the Vaccine Mandate?
The Democrats Lost Tuesday Night, so Naturally They Want to Overplay Their Hand
Democrats Handed the GOP the Advantage on a Nonpartisan Issue
Carper Now Says He Supports Filibuster Carve-Out For Voting Rights Bill
Joe Manchin Could Save His Career (And the Country) By Switching to the GOP, Here’s Why
Around the Interwebz
Twitter makes it easier to search tweets from specific accounts
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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Cut to the News
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USA
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: The Growing Crisis in Ethiopia
Plus: The Federal Reserve scales back its asset purchase program.
The Dispatch Staff | 3 |
Happy Friday! Papa John’s founder and former CEO John Schnatter said in a recent interview that he’s eaten 800 Papa John’s pizzas over the past year and a half, which by our calculations averages out to about 1.46 Papa John’s pizzas per day.
That’s plainly a preposterous pile of Papa John’s pizzas, Papa John.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The Occupational Health and Safety Administration on Thursday issued a slightly narrower version of the large-employer vaccine mandate President Joe Biden first outlined in September. The emergency temporary standard (ETS) will require companies with more than 100 employees implement vaccine or weekly testing mandates by January 4, 2022, but exempts employees who work from home or exclusively outdoors. Several Republican attorneys general and conservative advocacy groups filed lawsuits seeking to block the ETS from going into effect.
- The U.S. Embassy in Ethiopia issued a Level 4 Travel Advisory earlier this week urging Americans not to travel to the country and U.S. citizens currently there to consider departing because of “armed conflict, civil unrest, communications disruptions, crime, and the potential for terrorism and kidnapping in border areas.” The Embassy is also allowing non-emergency U.S. government employees and their family members to leave because of the conflict.
- The United Kingdom became the first country to approve the use of Merck’s COVID-19 antiviral drug that has been found to reduce the risk of hospitalization or death among infected individuals. The pill, known as molnupiravir, could be authorized by the Food and Drug Administration by the end of the year.
- The number of daily new COVID-19 cases in the U.S. has fallen 6 percent over the past two weeks while hospitalizations and deaths attributed to the virus are down 16 and 18 percent over the same timeframe, respectively. The Justice Department announced Thursday it has filed a lawsuit against the state of Texas over a recently enacted voting law, arguing that its provisions violate the Voting Rights Act and Civil Rights Act of 1964. “Texas Senate Bill 1’s restrictions on voter assistance at the polls and on which absentee ballots cast by eligible voters can be accepted by election officials are unlawful and indefensible,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott defended the law, noting it “restrict[s] illegal mail ballot voting” and actually increases voting hours.
- Igor Danchenko—a U.S.-based Russian national whose research contributed to the Democratic-funded Steele dossier that insinuated former President Donald Trump conspired with the Russian government during the 2016 campaign—was arrested Thursday and charged with lying to the FBI about his sources as part of Special Counsel John Durham’s probe investigating the origins of the Trump-Russia investigation.
- The Senate confirmed former State Department official Thomas Nides to serve as U.S. ambassador to Israel in a voice vote on Wednesday.
- Sudanese state TV reported Thursday that Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan ordered the release of four government ministers detained in last week’s coup, but a defense lawyer for the four officials says they have yet to be freed. Former Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok has returned home but remains on house arrest.
- Initial jobless claims decreased by 14,000 week-over-week to a pandemic-low 269,000 last week, the Labor Department reported Thursday.
- Politico reports that top Pennsylvania Republicans are seeking to recruit David McCormick—Army veteran, former Treasury Department official, and current CEO of Bridgewater Associates—to run for the retiring Pat Toomey’s U.S. Senate seat.
Situation in Ethiopia Worsens
On the one-year anniversary of the Ethiopian federal government’s military offensive into the northern region of Tigray, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed is bracing himself for the possibility of fighting in Ethiopia’s capital city of Addis Ababa. “The obligation to die for Ethiopia belongs to all of us,” the prime minister—and one-time Nobel Peace Prize winner— wrote in a Facebook post that has since been removed by the site’s content moderators for inciting violence. Ethiopia will “bury” the government’s opponents “with our blood,” Abiy added.
The fighting, which since its eruption has developed into one of the world’s deadliest conflicts, began amid regional and political tensions in November 2020. But as we wrote to you at the time, Ethiopia’s current instability dates back decades.
In 1991, the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) emerged victorious from the decades-long civil war in Ethiopia that eventually toppled the Communist Derg regime. The TPLF then led the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) governing coalition that ruled over Ethiopia from 1991 until 2018, when massive protests among the Oromo—the country’s largest ethnic group—ousted the EPRDF and brought current President Abiy Ahmed, an Oromo, to power. He would go on to win the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019 for bringing the stalemated conflict between Ethiopia and Eritrea, the TPLF’s rival, to a formal end.
But the TPLF never fully accepted Ahmed’s rise to power and “the sense of having earned power [in 1991] is as important, if not more so,” than ethnic and regional conflicts between the Oromo and Tigrayan peoples, said the American Enterprise Institute’s Emily Estelle in an interview with The Dispatch.
A rebel group made up of Oromo fighters—the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA)—has since joined forces with the TPLF, presenting Abiy with a multifront conflict and posing an immediate threat to the capital city. The international community’s repeated calls for a ceasefire have gone unanswered for months as all combatant parties prolong hostilities and exacerbate an increasingly dire humanitarian crisis.
On Tuesday, Ethiopian Attorney General Gedion Timothewos declared a state of emergency to mobilize Addis Ababa’s residents to defend the city. Ethiopia’s House of Peoples Representatives, the lower chamber of the country’s parliamentary government, approved the provision on Thursday, permitting the government to conscript armed citizens and conduct unwarranted searches and arrests. The latter, even before the emergency declaration, has become increasingly common as security forces target ethnic Tigrayans in the capital city.
“That’s one of the reasons that the temperature of this conflict has turned up so high—the targeting of civilians based on ethnicity on the part of the Ethiopian government. The flip side of that is Tigrayan forces now coming through Amhara areas,” Estelle said, referring to the TPLF’s advances through its neighbor state to the south, which has been the government’s primary military ally. “There’s basically equal opportunity for abuse on all sides.”
The Taper Is Here
Pandemic-weary Americans have for months been desperate for signs that COVID-19 is coming to an end, and on Wednesday, they got one: The Federal Reserve is finally going to begin scaling back its monthly purchases of U.S. Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities.
The program—also known as quantitative easing (QE)—was one feature of a suite of policy tools announced in March 2020 aimed at staving off an even worse recession than the one that ensued. In purchasing hundreds of billions of dollars worth of bonds and securities, the Fed injected liquidity into the economy, which in turn lowered long-term interest rates and spurred demand. After a year and a half of $120 billion in monthly purchases, the central bank’s balance sheet has essentially doubled, from $4.2 trillion before the pandemic to $8.6 trillion now.
That number will continue to rise, but at a slower pace, as the Fed announced it will reduce the size of its purchases by $15 billion each month from now on. While maintaining that it is prepared to adjust the pace as economic conditions require, the central bank projected it will add $105 billion to its holdings in November, $90 billion in December, and so on, until QE phases out entirely in June.
Fed leaders had telegraphed for months that this was coming, and accordingly, bond yields didn’t move much upon the announcement. What did come as a surprise to some investors, however, was Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s public delinking of the QE decision and any adjustment to the federal funds interest rate, which the Federal Open Markets Committee (FOMC) opted on Wednesday to leave near zero. “Our decision today to begin tapering our asset purchases does not imply any direct signal regarding our interest rate policy,” Powell said in a press conference following the announcement. “We continue to articulate a different and more stringent test for the economic conditions that would need to be met before raising the federal funds rate.”
Economists and policymakers have been sparring for months over the state of the United States’ economic recovery from the pandemic, and whether the inflation we’re all experiencing is a transitory response to temporarily disjointed supply chains or a longer-term concern. Powell has planted himself firmly in the former camp, and he remained there in his opening remarks this week.
“We understand the difficulties that high inflation poses for individuals and families, particularly those with limited means to absorb higher prices for essentials such as food and transportation,” he said. “Our tools cannot ease supply constraints. Like most forecasters, we continue to believe that our dynamic economy will adjust to the supply and demand imbalances, and that as it does, inflation will decline to levels much closer to our 2 percent longer-run goal.”
As we noted on Monday, the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index increased 4.4 percent year-over-year in September, and inflation has in recent months become a defining issue in the eyes of everyday Americans: Two-thirds of respondents in a recent Reuters-Ipsos poll said inflation is a “very big” concern of theirs. Whether a result of this public pressure or a genuine change of heart in light of new evidence, Powell seemed to give a bit more credence to inflation hawks’ worries than he had in the past.
Worth Your Time
- In an essay for The Atlantic, Matthew Yglesias and Steven Teles outline a proposal they argue could allow moderates to exert more influence, make political institutions more functional, and save democracy itself. “If a cross-party group of moderate senators worked together it could dominate the Senate, and with it the operation of the entire political system,” they write. “Imagine, as a start, that somewhere from six to nine senators agreed to work together, either as a formally separate party or through an agreement of factions in either party. … A moderate bloc could demand rules that prioritize bipartisan bills. The lack of space for this kind of legislation is a primary complaint of a huge share of senators, including fairly ideological ones. But the bulk of members prioritize partisan solidarity over dreams of a more open Senate.”
- Kristen Soltis Anderson—pollster and friend of The Dispatch—launched a newsletter this week where she will employ polling and research to dissect cultural and political trends. We highly recommend you check out Thursday’s edition, in which she argues that parents are the new center of politics. “As with any group, parents are hardly a monolith,” she notes. “There are progressive parents who can’t imagine their children going maskless in the classroom and there are conservative parents who can’t imagine making their kid wear a mask on the playground. There are parents with a wide range of desires for their own careers and with very different relationships to issues like childcare or paid leave. You can obviously say that parents want their children to be safe, healthy, and to have opportunities. Parents of all kinds want to provide a good quality of life and a good moral compass to their children. But beyond that? There’s no real one-size-fits-all answer to the question of what parents want. What you can bet on is that parents will be at the heart of our nation’s biggest political debates for the next twelve months, as both parties try to answer the question: what do parents really want?”
- Tonight at 9 p.m. ET, CNN’s Jake Tapper will present a documentary on former President Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election. The Dispatch received an advanced copy, and it will be well worth your time. Featuring interviews with Republican election officials and lawmakers who stood up to the leader of their party, Tapper tells the story of just how close we came to an American coup. “In the moments of truth, you need the right people to pass the most difficult tests,” Rep. Anthony Gonzalez tells him. “We had just enough people on January 6 pass the test.” Sick around until the end for an appearance from our very own Chris Stirewalt.
Something Refreshing
Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam meets with Governor-elect Glenn Youngkin. “I so appreciate your willingness to be so helpful as we head towards this next stage in Virginia’s future,” Youngkin tells Northam. abcn.ws/3EKO9O9
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
A judge in Georgia admitted there appeared to be “intentional discrimination” against 11 potential Black jurors after a nearly all-white jury was selected for the trial of three white men accused of murdering Ahmaud Arbery, but he seated the jury anyway.
Toeing the Company Line
- The Free Beacon’s Matthew Continetti joined The Remnant yesterday for a conversation about Virginia and what it portends for the GOP. Will Republican candidates in 2022 emulate Glenn Youngkin’s style? Has Trump’s grip on the GOP loosened? And where exactly did Terry McAuliffe go wrong?
- In a piece for the site, Paul D. Miller addresses the deep divisions in our country, pointing to data that shows both left and right consider their opponents to be dangers to democracy. He writes, “Daydreaming of civil war is a First World privilege. We indulge in fantasies of winning a final victory against political opponents … and we do so because almost none of us have any real experience of physical violence beyond what we see in the movies.
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
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
It’s Not About the Milk
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
November 5, 2021 THE LATEST Tucker Carlson’s three-part series “Patriot Purge,” which was released this week on Fox Nation, is far more sophisticated and alarming than previously anticipated, Zeeshan Aleem writes. “Carlson deploys classic conspiracy theory reasoning by using one or two examples of something that seemingly defies the mainstream narrative about Jan. 6 and then uses that to try to discredit the idea that any of it could be true.” Aleem worries that it could further radicalize an already radical movement. “It advances the conspiracy theory that the violence of Jan. 6 was an inside job by the government, perhaps in coordination with left-wing protesters, in order to manufacture a pretext for a ‘War on Terror 2.0.'”
Read Zeeshan Aleem’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Friday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Aaron Rodgers may have outsmarted reporters, but he couldn’t outsmart Covid. Read More Democrats won ugly in New Jersey. That won’t cut it in 2022. Read More Democrats can’t fight fear with facts. Virginia’s election proved that. Read More Rittenhouse’s trial has been marred by controversy from the outset. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC
“Four Seasons Total Documentary” delves into Rudy Giuliani’s infamous press conference at Four Seasons Total Landscaping, delivered just as the presidential election was being called for Joe Biden.
One year after the event that became an internet sensation, meet the family behind the Philadelphia small business that was thrust into the national spotlight. Watch “Four Seasons Total Documentary,” Sunday at 10 p.m. ET.
How do we make sense of this unprecedented moment in world history? Why is this all happening? Chris Hayes asks the big questions that keep him up at night every week on his podcast, aptly titled, “Why Is This Happening?”
In the newest episode, Al Roker joins Chris to talk about how he found his way into TV, what goes into producing forecasts and why climate change is an existential threat to our world. In addition to being on the Today Show, he’s also the author of more than ten books, including his latest one, “You Look So Much Better in Person,” and has a new limited series podcast out called Cooking Up a Storm. Listen to the new episode now. Follow MSNBC
Check out the MSNBC channel on Apple News
Download the NBC News Mobile App and watch MSNBC
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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47.) ABC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
This morning we have exclusive reporting on Michigan Republican efforts to sway the state’s independent redistricting process. Plus, drugmaker Pfizer says its Covid-19 antiviral pill is a potential “game-changer.” And a 60-day sentence for a Texas real estate agent who tweeted that she had “blond hair white skin” and was “not going to jail” for her participation in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.
Here’s what we’re watching today. EXCLUSIVE Michigan Republicans, blocked by voters from being directly involved in redrawing the state’s voting maps, launched a coordinated effort to influence the independent commission tasked with the job, an action documented in a series of recordings obtained by NBC News.
Senior state party officials hosted training sessions, conducting at least two last month, and distributed talking points coaching Republican supporters on how to argue on behalf of map changes that experts say would favor GOP candidates.
“By law, we cannot engage with those commission members directly. We have not and we will not, which is where all of you come in. You get to go talk to them in public hearings and leave messages on the portal,” one Republican operative said during a video recording of a Zoom training session on Oct. 19 that was shared with NBC News by a source critical of the effort.
Read the full story from senior NBC News reporter Jane C. Timm here. Friday’s Top Stories
The drugmaker said that clinical trials of its experimental Covid-19 pill have been so successful in preventing people from becoming hospitalized or dying from the virus, that it’s stopping the studies early in the hope that the general public might benefit. Democratic leaders have laid the groundwork for Friday votes on both the social safety net bill and the infrastructure package that would cap months of internal party negotiations — and finally hand Biden a legislative victory. While the seating of a nearly all-white jury will likely be discussed by observers during the trial, it does not appear to be in violation of the jury selection process, legal experts following the case said. Jenna Ryan admitted to entering the Capitol after a pro-Trump mob attacked it on Jan. 6 and was outspoken in interviews saying she had no regrets about her participation. The judge reportedly told Ryan when handing down the sentence that she has become “one of the faces of January 6” and that her sentence should send a message to others. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
OPINION The former NFL star’s tragic accident that killed a 23-year-old woman ties into the broader problem with DUI laws, MSNBC legal analyst Danny Cevallos writes in an opinion piece. Select
Target’s weeklong holiday sale is here through Nov. 6 — here are our picks for the retailer’s best sales and deals right now. One Fun Thing
Built in 1892 as a place of worship, the Ryman Auditorium has since evolved into a venue that has hosted country music legends from Elvis to Johnny Cash and Dolly Parton. It was also home to the Grand Ole Opry, America’s longest-running radio show.
Singer Michael Ray speaks with Lester Holt about his first performance in the auditorium. Watch the video 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 |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Ben Kamisar and Benjy Sarlin
FIRST READ: House Democrats move to advance Biden agenda after election losses — and without Senate assurances
Well, it looks like House Democrats are finally going to pass the Senate’s bipartisan infrastructure bill, sending it to President Biden’s desk to become law.
It just took losses in Virginia and a near-loss in New Jersey to get to this moment.
“Democratic leaders laid the groundwork for Friday votes on both a social safety net bill and an infrastructure package that would cap months of internal party negotiations,” NBC’s Sahil Kapur, Haley Talbot, Monica Alba and Leigh Ann Caldwell report.
“A Democratic leadership source said the House plans to vote on the two pieces of legislation Friday, and that leaders are feeling confident they will finish them in one day, a move that would hand Biden a major legislative victory at a time when his poll numbers are falling.”
But here’s the rub on that social safety net bill: What it now also includes – an immigration provision, lifting a cap on SALT deductions and paid family leave – has little chance of passing the Senate and getting Joe Manchin’s vote (see more below on the West Virginia senator).
And remember, vulnerable House Democrats demanded that they not vote on a social safety net bill that couldn’t pass the Senate and get Manchin’s/Kyrsten Sinema’s backing.
Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
So what’s different today than in September or October, when there was an effort to the infrastructure bill separately?
Well, one clear difference is that Machin has settled on a price tag ($1.75 trillion) and support for individual items (more on that below). That’s definite progress from a month ago, and there’s clear momentum for SOMETHING to pass on the social safety net bill.
Another difference is that Democrats just lost in Virginia.
And yet another difference is that if/when the infrastructure bill clears the House, President Biden won’t be getting the same kind of bipartisan kumbaya moment he had back in August, when the Senate first passed the legislation.
“This historic investment in infrastructure is what I believe you, the American people, want — what you’ve been asking for for a long, long time,” Biden said back in August. “This bill shows that we can work together.”
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Talking policy with Benjy: What is going on with Joe Manchin?
There’s a lot of action in the House this week on both the president’s Build Back Better plan and infrastructure, the latter of which could potentially be signed into law within days.
But there’s still a basic question looming over all of this, and it’s the same one we write about all the time: What does Joe Manchin want? Because right now he’s delivering two messages at the same time and they tell two very different stories about how close Democrats are to a final bill.
On the one hand, Manchin is emphasizing areas of agreement on the current bill’s most critical features.
“We agreed on child care, we’ve agreed on pre-K, three and four, we agreed on in-home services, we agree on basically climate,” Manchin said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” Thursday.
From the quote, you might assume Manchin agrees on the largest chunks of the White House’s plan and just needs progressives to cave on a few outstanding issues where they disagree, like Medicare benefits and paid family leave. He’s made similar remarks for weeks and even told CNN on Monday that he thought a bill could be voted on by Thanksgiving, which suggests he’s close to a deal.
On the other hand, Manchin has started warning loudly and regularly that he doesn’t trust the bill’s budget math.
“We’re using 10 years of revenue to basically supply one or two or five or six years of services,” Manchin said, also on “Morning Joe” yesterday. “And that’s not the true cost. The true cost would be 10 years to 10 years. So, if you have 10 years of revenue, then you would think that we put a program in place, that program will last 10 years, too.”
The problem is that these two takes are completely incompatible.
The White House framework features a child care and pre-k plan that expires after six years as a centerpiece. It makes Affordable Care Act fixes that expire after three years. It has a child tax credit that partially expires after one year.
And since Manchin’s other big demand is keeping the topline close to his preferred $1.5 trillion, making any of these permanent doesn’t just mean a tweak here or there, it means blowing up the framework and starting from scratch.
There’s plenty of people making the case, on both the center and the left, for doing a few things permanently rather than a list of temporary items Republicans might let expire. But at this point, THAT BIG a change would mean a totally different bill, likely with major features dropped from it entirely.
Nobody seems too confident they know exactly what Manchin is angling for here, and he hasn’t named any red lines, so it’s possible this 10-year concern is applied only to some features, dropped entirely, or is not enough to scuttle a deal. But until we know more, the White House plan is being torn in two different directions that can only rip it apart.
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Tweet of the Day: Remembering Colin Powell
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
531,000: The number of jobs created in October.
26 percent: The increase in ballots cast in Virginia’s race for governor when compared to the 2017 race.
89 percent: The amount Pfizer says trials show its new Covid-19 pill can reduce hospitalization or death among high-risk patients.
46,350,010: The number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 78,470 more since yesterday morning.)
754,765: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,066 more since yesterday morning.)
426,728,092: The number of total vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 1,455,264 more since yesterday morning.)
21,483,519: The number of booster vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 874,554 more since yesterday morning.)
58.2 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
69.9 percent: The share of all Americans 18-years and older who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
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Shameless Plug: Tickets on sale now for the Meet the Press Film Festival at AFI Fest
It’s almost time for the fifth annual Meet the Press Film Festival at AFI Fest!
This year’s festival features five programs of the best-in-class short documentaries — ticketholders can watch the films virtually or in-person on November 11th in Los Angeles.
You can get your tickets now at Fest.AFI.com
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
NBC has an inside look at how Michigan Republicans are trying to sway the state’s independent redistricting process.
Sources tell NBC News a second grand jury has been empaneled in New York City to investigate former President Trump and his businesses.
An analyst who worked on the Steele dossier has been arrested as part of the probe by Trump-era Special Council John Durham.
The Justice Department is suing Texas over its new election and voting laws.
The RNC has a new finance chair, Trump’s former ambassador to Spain.
The Wall Street Journal has a deep dive into the depths Tanzania has gone to downplay the toll of the pandemic.
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50.) CBS
51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
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58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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TODAY’S MORNING JOLT WITH JIM GERAGHTY |
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73.) POPULIST PRESS
The red wave is rolling hard and democrats are stone cold shook
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🚨RED ALERT: YOUNGKIN IN BED WITH DOMINION VOTING…
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TOP STORIES:
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Another Big Loss For Democrats In Virginia
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Criminal Charges Filed Against Elections Commissioners
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NJ Poll Workers Caught Red Handed
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Democrat Election Nightmare — Top Senator Voted Out
- TUCKER: Media Will Never Tell You This…
- BREAKING: Major Arrest Made From Durham Report
- YOUNGKIN IN BED WITH DOMINION VOTING…
- NJ Race Called After 40,000 Votes Appeared Overnight…
- US MILITARY ISSUES DIRE WARNING
- Illegal Immigrants Barter For Police Officers’ Lives
- BREAKING: Investigation Launched Into NJ Elections After Dominion Machines “Glitched”
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IN DEPTH:
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- Texas Father Who Lost Teen Son to the Pfizer Vaccine: “My government lied to me”
- DeSantis Will Sue Biden Administration Over Vax Mandate
- Meghan Markle is Calling GOP Senators Using Royal Title to Lobby
- Pfizer Ad Tells Kids They’ll Get Superpowers from COVID Jab13 mins ago
- Twitter Censors Media For Misgendering Richard Levine 14 mins ago
- Joe Manchin Tells CNN — ‘America is not a Leftist country’…18 mins ago
- More Than Half of Unvaccinated Americans Say Nothing Will Change Their Mind 19 mins ago
- Stick A Fork In The Biden Regime, It’s Done 28 mins ago
- Mayor has close ties to lead detective, prosecuting DA in Rittenhouse Case 29 mins ago
- Democratic bill would raise taxes $1.5 trillion… 1 hour ago
- U.S. Labor Productivity Worst Decline in 40 Years 2 hours ago
- AOC Thinks Loss Related To NOT Far-Left Enough… 2 hours ago
- Missouri AG to sue Biden Administration… 2 hours ago
- NY Nurses Fight Vax Mandate… Case To U.S. Supreme Court 2 hours ago
- ‘CAN’T SURVIVE IT’: Liberal city wants to offer highest minimum wage in the US 2 hours ago
- Texas Builds Makeshift Border Walls … 2 hours ago
- Truck Driver Close to Upsetting State Senate President… 2 hours ago
- Biden Mandate Forces To Choose Food or Vax 2 hours ago
- Soros Spent $500k+ in Austin Race… 3 hours ago
- De Blasio Mansion Under Attack From Angry New Yorkers 3 hours ago
- Hamachek Appears on Steel Truth to Discuss Red Wave 3 hours ago
- Biden admin issues national vax order 4 hours ago
- Disgusting Garbage Piles Up In NYC 4 hours ago
- Tulsi Gabbard celebrates the defeat of Democrat Terry McAuliffe 14 mins ago
- Entire White House Call’s a Lid After Shocking Election Results… 16 mins ago
- Newt Gingrich predicts electoral ‘tsunami’ in 2022… 19 mins ago
- The Intercept publishes error-riddled piece on Democrat tiki torch hoax… 19 mins ago
- Chris Cuomo suffers his lowest rated show of 2021 24 mins ago
- San Francisco Will Require children Show Vax Proof… 34 mins ago
- Virginia win pressures House Democrats to retire… 34 mins ago
- VIDEO: De Santis Referring To The “Brandon Administration” 44 mins ago
- Atlanta Fans Boo Woke MLB Commissioner… 54 mins ago
- Aaron Rodgers tests positive for COVID-19… 54 mins ago
- Jason Whitlock: ‘Ungrateful Clown’ Kaepernick ‘Has Severe Daddy Issues’ 54 mins ago
- DeSantis Unveils Election Fraud Crime-Fighting Unit… 58 mins ago
- LOOK: Dallas Cowboys Salute to Service Members… 59 mins ago
- Climate Democracy Dies in Darkness, by Tim Graham 1 hour ago
- Consequences of America Losing a War to China… 1 hour ago
- DOJ Claims Right To Abort a Baby With a Beating Heart… 1 hour ago
- Pope Compares Effects of Climate Change to World War II 1 hour ago
- U.S. House Passes Bill to Exert Pressure on Nicaragua… 1 hour ago
- China Mocks Joe Biden: ‘How Powerless He Is’ 1 hour ago
- China Could Have 1,000 Nuclear Warheads by 2030 1 hour ago
- Commercial Radar Satellites Reveal Russian Stealth Fighters… 1 hour ago
- Iran Won’t Back Down 1 hour ago
- Manchin Doubles Down Against Paid Family Leave… 1 hour ago
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- Pelosi: Paid leave added back into Biden social spending bill 2 hours ago
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- Italian Institute of Health Drastically Reduces Its Official COVID Death Toll Number 2 hours ago
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74.) THE POST MILLENNIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Welcome to the Friday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect the week online. Today:
BREAK THE INTERNET Pete Davidson is making headlines for his dating life Over Halloween weekend, People released photos of Kim Kardashian and Pete Davidson holding hands on a ride at Knott’s Berry Farm in California. The photos immediately took over Twitter, sparking debate—again!—about the SNL cast member’s attraction. For those who have not been following Davidson’s love life, which is in the headlines pretty regularly, he has dated a lot of famous women, including Ariana Grande, Margaret Qualley, and Kate Beckinsale. He most recently dated Bridgerton star Phoebe Dynevor. And now he’s rumored to be cozying up to Kim Kardashian, another celebrity known for making headlines, who filed for divorce from Kanye West (now known as Ye) earlier this year.
The photos ignited another round of Davidson discourse. People wondered if he was the new Warren Beatty. Davidson also became the subject of Photoshopped memes where people announced that he was “spotted” with a niche celebrities, from Mary Byrne to Ms. Juicy Baby (Shirlene Pearson) to a famous L.A. mannequin. Others joked that Davidson was getting back at Ye for having to pay for his meal at Nobu. “Pete Davidson’s native NYC” also became a meme, taken from a Page Six headline. “Which airport should I book a flight out of? JFK (John F. Kennedy Airport) or PDNNY (Pete Davidson’s Native New York)” reads one tweet.
And now, if all that wasn’t enough, there’s a Pete Davidson-inspired sex toy that is covered in tattoos. It’s the literal embodiment of Big Dick Energy. Culture Editor
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TIKTOK How did ‘Island Boy’ become a meme? Twin brothers from South Florida who go by Flyysoulja and Kodiyakredd have the internet in their “Island Boy” grip. On Oct. 12, the 20-year-olds debuted a freestyle, “Island Boy,” performed in a pool; the TikTok has more than 8 million views.
As people veered between parodying the song and wondering why they couldn’t stop singing it, “Island Boy” became a meme.
Read the full story here.
—Audra Schroeder, senior writer
MISINFORMATION Crochet TikTokers warn people against making potholders with acrylic yarn Crochet TikTok has been up in arms over a crocheter who made a video showcasing a bunch of potholders made with acrylic yarn. For many knitters and crocheters, the choice of whether to use acrylic yarn or natural fibers for projects usually boils down to a number of factors like accessibility, cost, or personal preference. (Acrylic yarn is cheaper and more widely available.)
But as many crochet TikTokers are pointing out this week, sometimes there are exceptions to that rule—and which yarn you make an item with could make the difference between safely handling hot items and getting burned with plastic.
Read the full story here.
—Michelle Jaworski, staff writer
MEME OF THE WEEK Steve Buscemi won Halloween by dressing up as his own meme.
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Friday 11.05.21 This morning’s October jobs report is expected to contain good news. An estimated 450,000 jobs were added last month, more than in both September and August. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. The congressional panel investigating the January 6 US Capitol attack meets last month. Capitol riot
The House committee investigating the January 6 Capitol riot is trying to move quickly as members face growing concern that their work would be shut down if the 2022 midterm elections result in a Republican-led House. The panel was in court yesterday to fight former President Trump’s efforts to withhold documents about what happened in the White House on the day of the insurrection. Today, the committee is scheduled to hear from Jeffrey Clark, a former Justice Department official who pushed baseless election conspiracy theories and consulted with Trump before the insurrection. Rep. Bennie Thompson, the chair of the select committee, says about 20 more subpoenas are expected to go out soon.
Climate
Global warming could be kept to 1.8 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels if all the pledges and promises made at the COP26 summit in Glasgow are kept, the International Energy Agency reports. Scientists have said warming needs to be kept to 1.5 degrees or below to avoid the most disastrous climate consequences, but 1.8 degrees is still big news given that the Earth is currently careening toward a 2.7-degree rise. The UK government announced that 23 more countries made commitments to phase out coal power. But some of the biggest greenhouse gas emitters — namely China, India and the US — did not sign on. All in all, the international vows fall short of what experts say is needed to reach net-zero coal emissions by 2050.
Coronavirus
Europe could face 500,000 more Covid-19 deaths this winter, the World Health Organization warns. The agency raised the alarm over rising cases and slowing vaccination rates, with a WHO regional director saying the pace of transmission across the region is of “grave concern.” Much of Europe is battling spikes in infections, with Germany reporting its highest number of daily new cases yesterday since the pandemic began. Meanwhile in the US, vaccinations for children ages 5 to 11 are underway, and federal workers can take paid time off to get their kids inoculated. The Biden administration also announced that vaccination and testing mandates will take effect January 4 for private businesses with 100 or more employees, certain health care workers and federal contractors. And two studies released yesterday back up a major benefit of the Covid-19 vaccines, concluding that even if vaccinated people get a breakthrough infection, they don’t get as sick.
Election
Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin’s election victory this week wasn’t the only big GOP gain in the state. Republicans will win at least 50 seats in the House of Delegates, guaranteeing that Democrats will no longer hold full control there. Dems could still tie the number of seats, resulting in a power-sharing agreement. Virginia Republicans also secured the state’s lieutenant governor and attorney general posts. Democrats still control Virginia’s state Senate, where members don’t face election until 2023, but they could face difficulty in blocking any GOP-led overhauls. The formerly Democratic-controlled state’s election fallout this week is seen as a bellwether of sorts for the 2022 midterms.
Venezuela
The International Criminal Court will formally investigate allegations of crimes against humanity in Venezuela. Embattled President Nicolas Maduro’s government has been on the ICC’s radar since 2018. That’s when several South American nations and Canada asked the court to investigate the country for alleged crimes, including extrajudicial murder and torture, dating to 2014. Venezuelans have endured years of political and social unrest, and the United Nations recently accused Venezuelan security forces of using excessive force and arbitrarily detaining thousands of people during protests against Maduro’s government. Maduro has agreed in writing to cooperate with the probe. Opposition leader Juan Guaidó, who has been backed by dozens of countries as Venezuela’s legitimate president, welcomed the decision. Sponsor Content by LendingTree Hack Your Mortgage with These 3 Tactics Take a look at these simple ways to save on your mortgage in 2021.
People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. A high school principal is apologizing for lack of sportsmanship after the football team won a game 106-0
See the most notable versions of Princess Diana seen onscreen
Marie Antoinette’s diamond bracelets expected to fetch up to $4 million at auction
Identifying ‘habitable worlds’ is a top priority for astronomers in the decade ahead
Kristen Stewart elated to learn Guy Fieri is willing to officiate her wedding The Ahmaud Arbery murder trial is set to start today $650 million That’s the value of a new US arms sale to Saudi Arabia, as announced to Congress by the State Department. The sale, which includes 280 advanced medium-range air-to-air missiles, comes as US-Saudi Arabia relations remain strained. I want to applaud the courage of the numerous players, executives, and staffers for fighting toxic environments of racial insensitivity, sexual harassment, and micro-aggressions with their truth.
Former Phoenix Suns head coach Earl Watson, who was among those accusing Phoenix Suns and Mercury managing partner Robert Sarver of years of racist and sexist language in a bombshell ESPN article. Sarver called the report inaccurate and misleading. Brought to you by CNN Underscored Walmart’s first Deals for Days drop is live: Here are 22 items to snag ASAP From waterproof Bluetooth speakers to stunning artificial Christmas trees, Walmart is marking down over 1,500 items during its first Deals for Days drop of the season. Here are a few of our favorite products on sale. Wheeeee! 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- Tax Cuts For the Rich!
- Maryland county teaches there’s a “double pandemic” of COVID and racism
- St. Augustine’s Climate Summit
- Everything not forbidden…
- John Durham works in mysterious ways
Tax Cuts For the Rich!
Posted: 04 Nov 2021 04:54 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)That is what the Democrats are pushing, and anyone who is surprised hasn’t been paying attention. Current polling shows that most people think Republicans, not Democrats, are the party of the working class, and they are right. Democrats represent, more than anyone else, wealthy urbanites in blue states who wrongly believe themselves to be “elite.” But these lefty urbanites have a serious problem: by virtue of living in blue states, they are heavily taxed. What to do about that? For a long time, the federal tax code included an unlimited deduction for state and local tax payments. Thus, working class taxpayers in low-tax states like South Dakota and Texas subsidized rich taxpayers in blue states like California, New York and Illinois. That changed with the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act–one of the Trump administration’s signal achievements–which capped the deduction for state and local taxes at $10,000. Thus, the vast majority of blue state taxpayers kept their privileged tax treatment. The only ones who lost out were high-income blue staters who are now only partly subsidized by blue collar taxpayers in Tennessee and Florida. But the Democratic Party’s core supporters are wealthy people in blue states, so restoring the full state and local tax deduction–eliminating the $10,000 cap–has been a top priority for Chuck Schumer, Nancy Pelosi, et al. Sure enough, the Democrats’ reconciliation bill–a Christmas package for the Left–would restore full deductibility, in order to benefit high-income blue-staters. Dan Crenshaw comments, with data from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget:
There is nothing surprising or controversial about this. When you eliminate a $10,000 cap on the state and local tax deduction, you obviously are only going to benefit high-income taxpayers. And you are doing nothing for middle-class taxpayers in states like Texas, Florida, Tennessee, and South Dakota that manage their finances wisely and don’t overtax their residents. There is nothing necessarily wrong with being the party of the blue-state rich. Democrats just need to own it. That is who they are.
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Maryland county teaches there’s a “double pandemic” of COVID and racism
Posted: 04 Nov 2021 12:56 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Earlier today, Scott showed how the assertion “Critical Race Theory is not taught in [fill in name of state] schools” has become a mantra on left-wing cable news. It’s also a mantra at the Washington Post. Actually, Critical Race Theory (CRT) is a benign-sounding description of what is being taught in many public schools. Democrats are lucky that the label for the racist indoctrination that’s going on isn’t “Whites are racists theory” (WART). But it’s not wrong to say that CRT is being taught in many public schools. Sure, students aren’t being taught that theory as it’s presented at law schools, graduate schools, and colleges. But they are being taught a dumbed-down version of it. The CRT movement started in law schools. Its insight was that legal education and theory did not give an accounting how race and racism has played a part in law. Certainly, the legal education I received at Stanford Law School in the early 1970s did not. What public schools in Northern Virginia and elsewhere in the D.C. area purport to do through their version of CRT is to provide a full accounting of the role race has played, and allegedly still plays, throughout American society. There are two main problems with this. First, unlike law schools in the 1970s, public schools in much of America have long provided an accounting of race’s role in America. My daughters began attending public school in Montgomery County, Maryland in the early 1990s. Every February, from Kindergarten on, they received an accounting of racism in America via Black History Month. Nor was this accounting confined to February. It informed the selection of literature my daughters were assigned. And the U.S. History textbooks used in my daughters’ classes in Middle School and High School did not soft-pedal racism in America. Thus, the teaching of dumbed-down CRT in public schools doesn’t fill a void — not unless one believes that race has been and remains the predominant fact about America and that ours is an incorrigibly racist country. The second, and biggest, problem with dumbed-down CRT is that it teaches this. Consider what’s happening in Montgomery County, Maryland. According to new documents obtained by Judicial Watch, this county, Maryland’s most populous, has launched a lesson plan teaching children that there is a “dual pandemic” involving COVID-19 and “systemic racism.” In an August 26, 2020 email to Montgomery County Public Schools principals, associate superintendent Janet Wilson announced that “all schools will be required to implement a student psychoeducational lesson during one of the school’s mandatory Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) block [sic] before September 18, 2020.” The lesson “will provide students crisis facts about the dual pandemic (COVID-19 and systemic racism) that is occurring around the country and here in Montgomery County.” A PowerPoint presentation on “Family Guidance to the Psychoeducational Lesson” includes a slide with a link to a reading of Ibram X. Kendi’s book “Antiracist Baby.” Teachers are advised that Kendi’s “Antiracist Baby” book introduces “the youngest readers” to antiracism. It calls the book “the perfect gift” for “ages baby to age 3.” Kendi is the professor who took ideas from Critical Race Theory and translated them into a dumbed-down, media-friendly version of it. If race-hustling leftists and their allies on school boards and at organs like the Washington Post want to defend teaching students that America is an incorrigibly racist country that’s experiencing an outbreak racism comparable to the Covid pandemic, they should make that case to the public. Instead, they hide behind the misleading claim that CRT is taught only in graduate schools and “is not taught in [fill in name of state] public schools.” As we can see from what’s going on in Montgomery County and in many other jurisdictions, a form of CRT is being taught in public schools. Stated differently, and more to the point, “Whites are racists theory” is being taught to American school children.
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St. Augustine’s Climate Summit
Posted: 04 Nov 2021 12:49 PM PDT (Steven Hayward)It is telling that the only notable news to come out of the latest UN “Climate Summit” (COP 26) is that (P)resident Joe Biden fell asleep. The only real question is why everyone else didn’t fall asleep along with him. At this point in the climate circus I’m tempted to say that when it comes to actual energy, the whole thing now resembles St. Augustine’s famous prayer: “Lord, make me chaste—but not yet!” The typical climate speech at Glasgow more or less runs as follow:
If you do pay attention to this whole dreary business, you’ll know that virtually all of the doomsday predictions about climate change are based on emissions forecasts (in particular the one known as RCP 8.5) that the climate community no longer believes are plausible. This means that both the magnitude of prospective damages are likely less, and over a longer time horizon. In fact, the latest IPCC report admits this, not that the media or the climatistas would notice. They’d have to come up with new talking points, and the current ones are working so well. The folks at Carbon Brief—a conventional or “consensus” climate change outfit—has noticed:
The report has a whole bunch of interactive charts, but this summary chart is enough for now:
And who might we have to thank for this good news?
Now back to Glasgow, where everyone will keep saying, “Lord, make me green—but not yet.” Chaser:
Meanwhile, good to see the folks at COP 26 are focusing on the important things:
Defund the COPs!
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Everything not forbidden…
Posted: 04 Nov 2021 12:36 PM PDT (Scott Johnson)We seem to be going down the path leading to everything not forbidden is compulsory. The Biden administration is writing one version of the totalitarian rule into administrative law with the OSHA “emergency temporary standard” requiring employers with 100 or more employees to “develop, implement, and enforce a mandatory COVID-19 vaccination policy, with an exception for employers that instead adopt a policy requiring employees to either get vaccinated or elect to undergo regular COVID-19 testing and wear a face covering at work in lieu of vaccination.” It’s a long, long way to temporary. OSHA’s interim final rule and request for comments is posted here. It has also posted a summary here. OSHA states that it is “strongly encouraging vaccination.” I would put the emphasis on “strongly.” Translation is required for “encouraging.” We know what is meant by “vaccination.” The rule is a new chapter in the Adventures in Administrative Law that I sought to trace during the Obama administration. We will follow the legal argument that this new chapter of the saga entails. For background see my NR review of Philip Hamburger’s great Is Administrative Law Unlawful? Reason’s Jacob Sullum gets the ball rolling on the the OSHA ETS here.
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John Durham works in mysterious ways
Posted: 04 Nov 2021 09:50 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)But at least he is working. Federal authorities today arrested Igor Danchenko, an “analyst” who in 2016 gathered leads about possible links between Donald Trump and Russia for Democratic-funded opposition research. Danchenko was what Christopher Steele, who put the phony dossier together, has described as his “primary sub-source.” Gathering leads for opposition research can be a nasty business but, without more, it’s not a crime. However, lying to federal authorities is. This, according to the Washington Post, is what Danchenko is being charged with. Convicting Danchenko of lying to the FBI would be very small potatoes. It’s possible, however, that as part of plea deal, Danchenko might provide Durham with something, or someone, bigger. Ed Morrissey points out that DOJ Inspector General Michael Horowitz, in a 2019 report, suspected Danchenko of having been a Russian spy. If nothing else, this adds spice to this story. It may also add context to Steele dossier. It’s usual to end a post like this with the word “developing.” I’ll end mine by saying “developing slowly.”
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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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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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96.) NOT THE BEE
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
99.) MARK LEVIN
November 4, 2021
On Thursday’s Mark Levin Show, if Colin Kaepernick thinks the NFL is like slavery why does he keep trying to get on a team and volunteer to be if he considers it slavery? Just like the media calls those that they disagree with racists, MSNBC and CNN have substantial financial backing despite their lack of profit. America needs patriots to become shareholders of Comcast and AT&T, go to their shareholder’s meetings and object to their propaganda. Then, despite the Democrat’s Tuesday election loss, Nancy Pelosi is moving diligently to advance her agenda despite opposition from moderate and centrist Democrats who want to know what’s in the bill before voting for it. If our members of Congress, elected to represent us, don’t know what’s in the bill how will any of the citizens know what’s in it? Later, Sen, Mike Lee calls in to discuss the Constitutionality of President Biden’s OSHA vaccine mandate work-around. The verdict is a resounding, no! Lee hopes that the Supreme Court will take up these cases because this is the most egregious mandate since President Truman’s seizure of steel mills during the Korean War. Are the Democrats willing to lose everything in the name of a mandate they don’t legally have the power to impose? Afterward, John Fund, co-author of “Our Broken Elections: How the Left Changed the Way You Vote‘. Fund argues that re-engineering the electoral system in the name of COVID has immeasurably hurt the republic.
THIS IS FROM:
Politico
Pelosi aims to push domestic agenda double-whammy, despite centrist holdouts
Breitbart
Wharton Study: Build Back Better Will Not Be Free; Net Cost $2.42 Trillion
Breitbart
Truck Driver Edward Durr: How I Took Out New Jersey’s Top Democratic Boss
Fox News
China’s nuclear stockpile growing at ‘accelerating pace,’ will have 1,000 warheads by 2030: Pentagon
USNI News
China Has World’s Largest Navy With 355 Ships and Counting, Says Pentagon
Washington Times
China’s military consistently beats U.S. estimates
Right Scoop
DeSantis WARNS that soon the vaccinated will be ‘unvaccinated’ without booster
Rumble
CDC Director Can’t Say How Many CDC Employees Are Vaccinated
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Wang Zhao
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
103.) RELIABLE NEWS
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Biden has a policing add-on to his latest mandate, and if businesses disobey, they get fined into bankruptcy.
Accusations of malfeasance in NJ, different elections, same accusations.
AOC learned from the election — Virginia wasn’t WOKE enough! Good thought AOC, stick with that.
J6 prisoners aren’t being given their civil rights.
Fiery exchange between Dr. Paul and Dr. Fraudci.
Rittenhouse prosecutors proving it was self-defense so far.
NFL star kills a woman driving 154 mph
This is What the GOP Learned from the Election & Check Out What AOC LearnedRepublicans passed around a memo on lessons learned from this election. They stressed four points. They should add a fifth point – don’t make everything political. Education is not political.… | |
So Far, the Prosecution in Rittenhouse Case Is Proving Self-DefenseKyle Rittenhouse, now 18, is charged with reckless and intentional homicides in the deaths of Joseph Rosenbaum and Anthony Huber, and with attempted homicide for wounding Gaige Grosskreutz. The case… | |
WI Sheriff Sends Criminal Referrals on Five Election OfficialsLast week, we reported that a Wisconsin sheriff said election officials told all nursing homes to give illegal directives to staff during the 2020 election season, breaking election law. The… | |
Speaker Pelosi Is Putting Paid Leave Back in Her Socialist BillSpeaker Pelosi is putting paid family and medical leave back in the socialist spending bill. Illegal aliens will be eligible too, of course. “As we are reviewing priorities and at… | |
J6 Prisoners Deserve Civil Rights & Due ProcessAn Epoch Times commentary states, “Under Biden’s rule, for the first time in our history, normalizing the denial of civil rights and civil liberties based on ideology, not wrongdoing, is… | |
88% of People Dying from COV in Scotland Are VaccinatedThe Public Health data for Scotland, a very highly vaxxed country, indicates that in the last four weeks, 88% of COVID deaths and 77% of hospitalizations were of people who… | |
Biden Vows to Police New Vax Fiats as Lawsuits Pour InJoe Biden’s new vaccine mandate for large private companies comes with national police-spy enforcement. The plan is to surveil companies and fine disobedient employers into bankruptcy. We too can be… | |
NJ Boss Sweeney Might Cheat Truck Driver Out of His WinThe NJ Senate President Steve Sweeney claims ballots have suddenly appeared in his race with a Republican truck driver who allegedly spent $153 on his campaign (he actually spent $5,000).… | |
Brandon Admin Buying Media Companies & Local JournalistsDem Bill Gives Special Tax Handout to Media Companies with Up to 1,500 “Local Journalists by John Kartch, Americans for Tax Reform The reconciliation bill working its way through the… | |
Rep Mo Brooks Introduces One-Page Bill to Block Federal Vax FiatThe time for action is now, and the American people deserve to know who is willing to stand with them to defend our constitution. ~ Representative Mo Brooks Rep. Mo… | |
Chatting About Raping & Killing White People OnlineAs long as Trump’s mean tweets are gone, it’s all good. (Irony here) | |
McDonald’s CEO Labeled a Racist for Calling Out Parents of Dead KidsMcDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski is under fire over a text exchange earlier this year with Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot in which he commented on the separate shooting deaths of two… | |
Paul Calls Fauci a “Clear and Present Danger” to the World – Says Quit! Fiery!The NIH recently and finally admitted they did fund gain-of-function research despite Dr. Anthony Fauci of NIAID, NIH retiree Dr. Collins, and others claiming they did not. Senator Rand Paul… | |
Biden Warns He Will Surveil & Fine Businesses $136,532 Over Vax FiatBiden’s administration warned Thursday there would be “planned inspections” and heavy fines of $136,532 for businesses to assure the new coronavirus vaccine fiat is obeyed. The mandate is set for… | |
Our Media Apparently Decides Who Won the NJ Gubernatorial ElectionApparently, our corrupt media now calls elections and decides who wins. The Associated Press called the race for New Jersey Governor. Unsurprisingly, they called it for totalitarian progressive Phil Murphy.… | |
Breaking…Main Dossier Researcher Arrested for SomethingThe main researcher of the Steele dossier was arrested as part of the Trump-era special counsel inquiry led by John Durham. Igor Danchenko, a Russia analyst who worked with Christopher… | |
Investigation Underway of Strange Election Anomalies in New JerseyAn investigation has been launched into the New Jersey elections over the 56 machines that were shut down without counting votes. Voting machine companies are foreign entities and continue to… | |
Corruption In Kenosha in the Prosecution of Kyle RittenhouseThe State bears the burden of proof in the Rittenhouse case and, so far, at the end of day 2, the prosecution witnesses have not presented any evidence that it… | |
NFL star player kills woman in 156 mph DUI crashLas Vegas Raiders wide receiver Henry Ruggs III killed a woman in a high-speed car crash Tuesday morning. The 22-year-old star football player was driving his 2020 Chevrolet Corvette at… | |
Malfeasance in the New Jersey Gubernatorial ElectionProject Veritas released a new video today exposing malfeasance that took place in New Jersey’s gubernatorial election, where an election worker was willing to provide a ballot to a Veritas journalist… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) BECKER NEWS
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
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110.) RIGHT & FREE
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‘I’m not going to vote to overrule the parliamentarian,’ Sen. Joe Manchin said. ‘I’m not going to do that.’
Rep. Cori Bush, a Democrat left-wing “squad” member in the House, attacked Democrat Sen. Joe Manchin for his opposition to the multitrillion-dollar Build…
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111.) UNITED VOICE
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112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO
November 05, 2021
By Amanda Prestigiacomo
By Amanda Prestigiacomo
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113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
We’re out of Afghanistan. Good. We should have gotten out before. Our involvement there was America’s longest war, longer than the Civil War, World War I…
The deadline has moved from previous proposals.
Insurgent Conservatives
PO Box 8161 Greenwood, IN 46142
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114.) WAKING TIMES
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115.) UNCOVER DC