Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday Dece3mber 8, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
|
2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
WORDS OF WISDOM “A truth that’s told with bad intent beats all the lies you can invent.” WILLIAM BLAKE MORNING BRIEF TOP NEWS Take advantage of our Holiday Sale that gives you a $10 Amazon.com Gift Card, 4 months of complete access, and so much more for only $1. Give yourself the gift of FACTS reported in Truth and Tradition. Get 4 Months for $1
Limited time offer. Expires soon.
POSITIVE NEWS EPOCH OPINION A WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR Millions to be Hit Hard by this U.S. Scheme to Confiscate Your Savings Alan Greenspan, 20-year Chairman of the U.S. Fed, reveals Washington’s nasty trick to confiscate the savings of unsuspecting Americans. You won’t believe their sneaky tactic to take your wealth right out from under your nose. Here’s the one thing Greenspan recommends to avoid this nasty scheme. EPOCH TV EPOCH FUN If this email has been forwarded to you and you would like to sign up, please click here. Copyright © 2021 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved. The Epoch Times, 229 W 28th St, Fl.5, New York, NY 10001
With social media censorship sidelining many important headlines, our Morning Brief email is how we make sure you get the latest developments that our reporters have curated from around the world. It’s our way of keeping you truly informed so that you can make the decisions that align with your values. We hope you enjoy our coverage. Manage your email preferences here.
|
3.) DAYBREAK
|
4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 12.8.21
Good Wednesday morning.
Let’s begin with an update about one of the best in Florida media.
News Radio WFLA is changing up its morning lineup next year with the launch of “The Ryan Gorman Show.”
Gorman, who has hosted “PM Tampa Bay” since 2018, will host alongside Aaron Jacobson and producers Katie Butchino and James Burlander.
WFLA’s parent company, iHeartMedia Tampa Bay, is slotting the show in the 7-10 a.m. block on weekdays. “AM Tampa Bay with Jack Harris” will shift to the 5-7 a.m. block. It debuts Jan. 4.
“I’m excited to make the move to mornings and follow Jack Harris, a Tampa Bay and talk radio legend, and bring something unique and different to talk radio. We’re going to cover the biggest stories of the day and have fun doing it,” Gorman said.
“Plus, we’ll feature guests who have the inside scoop on what’s happening in Tampa Bay and across the country and how it will impact you. I’d like to thank the incredible leadership team at iHeartMedia Tampa for the opportunity to host a morning show in my hometown.”
Gorman will continue to host “iHeartRadio Communities,” which focuses on national topics and often anchors coverage of national breaking news on iHeartRadio stations across the country.
“We’ve got some great things happening in the mornings on 970WFLA beginning in the new year,” said Harris. “First, we’ll be expanding the local mornings on News Radio WFLA to five hours, and we’ll also be expanding our news coverage. As always, ‘AM Tampa Bay,’ followed by ‘The Ryan Gorman Show,’ will be a chock-full of information and entertainment.”
___
The Florida Citrus Mutual Board of Directors announced this week that G. Mathew “Matt” Joyner is taking over as CEO and executive vice president of the Bartow-based organization in April.
“Matt brings a unique perspective and skill set to Florida Citrus Mutual, having worked side-by-side with both Legislators in the halls of Congress and growers in the groves of Florida,” said Mutual President Glenn Beck. “We’re excited and encouraged for the future with him at the helm.”
A seventh-generation Floridian, Joyner earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration from the University of South Florida.
Joyner started his career in the financial services industry before joining the staff of then-U.S. Rep. Adam Putnam in 2001 and made the jump to the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services when Putnam took over as Agriculture Commissioner in 2011.
In 2018, he joined Florida Citrus Mutual and spent the last three years working as the organization’s Director of Government Relations.
He will succeed exiting CEO and Executive Vice President Michael W. Sparks, who announced he is leaving after 15 years on the job. Sparks will remain with Florida Citrus Mutual until June 30 to help ensure a smooth transition.
“Mike Sparks has led us through some of the toughest times this industry has ever seen,” said Mutual Past-President Tom Mitchell. “Florida Citrus Mutual and the Florida citrus industry will be forever grateful for his service and leadership.”
___
Here are some other reads worthy of your time.
— Analysis suggests media is treating Joe Biden as bad or worse than Donald Trump. Here’s why it’s ‘complete crap’: The Washington Post’s Dana Milbank penned an op-ed over the weekend accusing the media of treating Biden just as bad, if not worse, than Trump, using a “sentiment analysis” data tool. But FiveThirtyEight’s Nate Silver says the algorithm used is bad. In a Twitter thread Monday, Silver points out the algorithm identified more than 40,000 stories favorable toward Biden that were “just totally random,” some of which had nothing to do with Biden at all. Meanwhile, those articles identified as least favorable to Biden, while “a little bit more on the mark” were “mediocre” at best and included polling stories that reflect voter sentiment, not media sentiment. Further, Silver looked at FiveThirtyEight stories specifically and found “exactly the sort of story that @Milbank says there should be more of — calling out Trump’s attacks on democracy — which was listed as neutral toward Trump. Simply put, Silver surmised “designing good algorithms is hard, but this is an especially bad one.”
— Perhaps the scariest insider report from the Jan. 6 insurrection: Peter Meijer, a freshman Congressman from Michigan, had already received an unlikely crash course in Democracy post-Trump before Jan. 6, and he had already decided that he would vote to certify the 2020 election results, confirming Biden as the next President. But nothing prepared him for that fateful day. In an emotional retelling in the Atlantic, Meijer describes the day in horrifying detail — the screams, the evacuations, the Capitol Police, the feeling that nothing was under control. But perhaps most terrifying, he describes conversations. Meijer said that it seemed more people were planning to vote against certification after the riot, the exact opposite message Meijer expected folks would want to send. One explained that no matter how he felt, he couldn’t vote to certify because he was terrified of what it would mean for his family. “Remember, this wasn’t a hypothetical. You were casting that vote after seeing with your own two eyes what some of these people are capable of. If they’re willing to come after you inside the U.S. Capitol, what will they do when you’re at home with your kids,” he explained. Others inside the Capitol were heard discussing invoking the 25th Amendment against Trump. Neither of them voted later for impeachment.
— Republicans briefly supported peaceful racial justice protests. Now they don’t: For some, the bigger question here seems, why did they support them (and did they really) in the first place? But broader dynamics meant that brief support among conservative voters for nonviolent demonstrations calling for racial equality, particularly in policing, should never have been expected to last long. An analysis from FiveThirtyEight found that in June 2020, more than half of Trump voters at least somewhat supported peaceful demonstrations. By November of this year, that support plummeted 29 percentage points. For starters, most Republicans responded to polls on the issue, saying they only “somewhat” supported the protests, compared to 73% of Democrats who strongly supported them. Further, most Republicans disagree in general with the reason for the protests overall, rejecting evidence that racial biases exist and, in at least some cases, worrying more about racial discrimination against White people than people in racial and ethnic minorities. And lastly, Biden has since taken office. As FiveThirtyEight correlates, his inauguration has had a thermostat effect on viewpoints — as “warmer positions on racial issues” emerge, Republicans are “growing cooler toward them.”
— POLITICO launches ‘The Next Great Migration’: The series offers a wide-spanning look at why Black Americans are leaving major cities in numbers reminiscent of the Great Migration of the 20th century and how it could reshape political power for decades to come. Unlike the original Great Migration, which saw Black Americans fleeing the Jim Crow south to friendlier communities with more inclusive opportunities, the new migration saw the opposite. 2020 census data shows that Black residents are fleeing areas known for their dense African American populations, where Black Americans helped shape local and federal politics. The series, part of POLITICO’s Recast newsletter, will break down “the intersection of identity, race, leadership and power in American politics,” with an eye toward how recent demographic changes are restructuring local, state and federal governments.
___
Breaking overnight — Democrat Tracye Polson and Republican Nick Howland will advance to the February General Election to fill the unexpired Jacksonville City Council term of the late Tommy Hazouri.
With all precincts reporting in Tuesday’s First Election, Polson took the lead with 28,692 votes, followed closely by Howland with 28,366. Polson had 36.5% of the vote, while Howland had 36.08%.
Republican Howland “Howdy” Russell received 10,837 votes (13.79%) — good for third place. James “Coach” Jacobs took 10,715, in fourth with 13.63%.
Since no candidate took 50% in the First Election, Polson and Howland will move on to the next round. However, Howland appears to be stronger with his base than Polson is with hers.
Howland won 106 precincts, compared to 80 for Polson. Russell won no precincts, while Jacobs took 11 precincts in Districts 7, 8, 9 and 10, which could be seen as a warning for Polson’s citywide appeal.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
Tweet, tweet:
—@lennycurry: Well done @NickHowland15 running a visionary city council campaign in the 1st election. Congrats on making the runoff. Look forward to helping you close with a win in a few months. Vision matters!
—@AdamJKucharski: Arguably, the laziest and most damaging cognitive error of the pandemic is not appreciating that lagged outcomes like deaths don’t reflect current threat in a rising epidemic. Remember: first UK COVID case was identified on 31 Jan 2020 — first death was reported on 5 Mar.
Tweet, tweet:
—@AlexNazaryan: Matt Gaetz just told me at a news conference that if Republicans win the House in 2022, he will move to install Trump as House Speaker.
—@Timodc: Growing up, every story I was told about politics treated the W&M chairmanship as if it were the height of power and influence. Nunes is taking a pass on it to run Friendster for bigots. Congress’ decline in miniature.
—@SpencerRoachFL: I’ll be the first to go on record here: 1. Trump will not run in ‘24. 2. (Ron) DeSantis runs for President regardless. 3. DeSantis would win in a presidential primary against Trump.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@MDixon55: If you make a reporter wait eight hours for a statement, then right at deadline ask them to call you rather than sending said statement, then say you can’t use a name but only “spokesman,” you’re going to get an annoyed reporter on the other end I don’t make the rules
—@JeremyRedfern: … Grapesicles are a great snack. It’s important to focus on your overall health, as some of the major risk factors for COVID-19 include diabetes and obesity. The link to the recipe is right on the @HealthyFla Twitter.
—@AlixPMiller: A giant iguana just dropped from a tree, six inches away from my head and then proceeded to fight a rooster. I think that’s enough Key West nature for the day.
Tweet, tweet:
‘Sex and the City’ revival premieres — 1; Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 2; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 2; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 14; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 21; Private sector employees must be fully vaccinated or tested weekly — 27; final season of ‘This Is Us’ begins — 27; CES 2022 begins — 28; Ken Welch’s inauguration as St. Petersburg Mayor — 29; NFL season ends — 32; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 34; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 34; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 34; Florida Chamber’s 2022 Legislative Fly-In and Reception — 34; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 35; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 37; NFL playoffs begin — 38; ‘Ozark’ final season begins — 44; ‘Billions’ begins — 46; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 58; Super Bowl LVI — 67; ‘The Walking Dead’ final season part two begins — 74; Daytona 500 — 74; CPAC begins — 78; St. Pete Grand Prix — 79; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 85; The Oscars — 111; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 154; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 173; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 176; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 213; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 224; ‘The Lord of the Rings’ premieres on Amazon Prime — 268; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 303; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 338; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 341; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 373; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 436; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 597; ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 681; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 961.
— TOP STORY —
“First 2 cases of omicron COVID-19 variant detected in Florida, and one is in Tampa” via Ryan Ballogg and Lawrence Mower of the Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times — Officials at James A. Haley Veterans’ Hospital in Tampa confirmed Tuesday that someone who recently returned from international travel has tested positive for the omicron variant. The patient is experiencing only mild symptoms, according to a hospital spokesperson. State health officials have also confirmed that a presumptive case of the omicron variant was detected Monday in a COVID-19 patient in St. Lucie County. The Florida omicron cases have not yet been confirmed by the CDC. The agency has confirmed the presence of the omicron in 18 other states.
— STATEWIDE —
“DCF, Ron DeSantis respond to Nikki Fried letter on unused rental aid, release plan for remaining funds” via Daniel Figueroa of Florida Politics — The Department of Children and Families on Monday night responded to Fried‘s letter demanding information on its plan for $660 million in unaccounted-for funds from the Emergency Rental Assistance Program. But DCF said that’s not the case. “Florida has missed no deadlines,” DCF Spokesperson Laura Walthall told Florida Politics. “The Commissioner is incorrect and has outdated data.” Treasury data showed OUR Florida, the state-run program formed under DCF to distribute ERAP funds, had only spent 24% of the $870 million in federal pandemic rental assistance it was granted by Sept. 30.
“DeSantis to propose 60% increase in cancer research funding, First Lady says” via WFLA — Florida First Lady Casey DeSantis announced that the Governor increased the amount of funding for cancer research to $100 million in his proposed budget, an increase by 60%. The historic announcement came during a roundtable at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa with Surgeon General Dr. Joe Ladapo and other medical experts. “60%, I think, is really saying something about what you guys have done in your fields to lead the way, to earn the right to have this money to be able to do this,” Casey said. Ladapo said the funding will significantly impact Florida’s cancer centers on improving patient care and reducing cancer’s impact on people.
“DeSantis burns ‘global warming’ talk, yet pitches $276M in environmental spending” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Despite criticizing people who use global warming rhetoric, DeSantis announced a quarter billion in what he called a proactive approach to combat rising sea levels. Ahead of his formal budget announcement expected later this week, the Republican Governor unveiled $276 million in proposed state funding for 76 projects as part of the Department of Environmental Protection’s first three-year environmental spending plan. The Governor expected to announce “many hundreds of millions more” in environmental spending soon. When asked what DeSantis has done to address the root cause of global warming and rising sea levels, the Governor attacked liberal ideologies.
“DeSantis, Florida Supreme Court earn praise in ‘Judicial Hellholes’ report” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Despite the Legislature landing on a watch list of “Judicial Hellholes,” the Florida Justice Reform Institute says Florida has improved its standing for the third year in a row. No Florida jurisdictions appeared on the American Tort Reform Association’s ranking of eight “Judicial Hellholes” in the nation. However, the group’s annual report, the latest installment of which was released Tuesday, flagged the Florida Legislature on its watchlist, citing a history of abusive litigation in the state. Florida ranked as the worst “Hellhole” in the nation as recently as the group’s 2018 report. It fell to No. 2 in 2019. It fell off the ranking in 2020, landing instead on the watch list. The state as a whole, minus the Legislature, fell off the list in this year’s report.
What Jeff Brandes is reading — “Prison town economies suffer due to Florida corrections crisis” via Adam Walser of WFTS — The Florida Department of Corrections is in crisis, caused by a staffing shortage that has led to prisons closing. Cross City, Dixie County’s largest city, now finds itself at a crossroads. The water tower and prison lookout posts are by far the tallest structures for miles around. In good economic times, inmates outnumber residents. But these are not good times, according to residents who worry about their small town’s future. Currently, two out of the three units at the Cross City Correctional Institution are closed, meaning those employees have to travel to other prisons for work. Of 18,000 security positions in Florida’s Department of Corrections, 5,500 are currently vacant. That’s led the state to close prisons, work camps, and work release programs. Inmates and staff have also been consolidated at other facilities.
Chinese-linked insurance startup to take more than 40k property insurance policies from Citizens — The state Office of Insurance Regulation approved the application of upstart insurance company Vyrd Insurance which is indirectly staked by companies with ties to China, Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida reports. One backer is SiriusPoint, which is 40% owned by Shanghai-based China Minsheng Investment Group. Another is Kole, a company led by Robert Schimek, who is also the CEO of Singapore-based insurance matching company BoltTech. Separately, OIR greenlit Vyrd Insurance to take over about 42,000 property insurance policies state-backed insurer Citizens. SiriusPoint’s ties to a Chinese investment firm were not mentioned in any documentation OIR has released to the media.
Assignment editors — The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Florida Power & Light will hold a news conference to share plans for supporting Florida manatees, 9:30 a.m., Manatee Lagoon — FPL Eco-Discovery Center, 6000 N. Flagler Dr. West Palm Beach. Gates to Manatee Lagoon open at 9 a.m.
“Disney to tap BP exec and former ABC News correspondent Geoff Morrell as PR chief” via Kim Masters and Alex Weprin of The Hollywood Reporter — The Walt Disney Co. plans to name Morrell to the newly created role of chief corporate affairs officer. While he has been given a broader portfolio, his responsibilities include succeeding top communications officer Zenia Mucha, who will retire at the end of the year. Morrell, currently executive VP communications advocacy for BP, will take on a restructured and significantly expanded position leading PR for Disney. His official title will be chief corporate affairs officer, overseeing communications, government relations, public policy, philanthropy and environmental issues. Before joining the multinational oil and gas company, Morrell worked for both the Bush and Obama administrations as deputy assistant secretary of defense for public affairs at the Pentagon.
Help wanted — The Everglades Trust is seeking an experienced Executive Director who can lead political and advocacy efforts to protect Florida’s natural ecosystem, wildlife, and water supply. Interested candidates should send a cover letter and resume to Kirk Fordham at: Evergladestrustposition@gmail.com.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“House Democrats say they’ll plead for budget funding for ‘everyday Floridians’” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — House Democrats declared Tuesday their state budget priorities will focus on public education funding for all school staff, affordable housing assistance, health care benefits, social services, and tax help for those who are not big corporations. Democratic lawmakers and leadership met Tuesday to lay out their priorities, as the state awaits DeSantis‘ proposed estimated $101 billion 2022 state budget later this week. The Democrats predict the Governor’s budget, along with plans from Republican lawmakers, would be insufficient to provide for the needs of “everyday Floridians.” Rep, Anna Eskamani, ranking member on the House Ways and Means Committee, pushed for fairer taxes.
—” Millions filed in appropriation requests for Tampa Bay veterans” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics
“Manny Diaz, Juan Fernandez-Barquin to revive bill regulating pet sales” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Sen. Diaz and Rep. Fernandez-Barquin will give a new face to an old bill this Session, as they’re sponsoring a measure aiming to more strictly regulate pet sales and help cut down on puppy mills. The two GOP lawmakers are fronting the measures (SB 994, HB 849). Fernandez-Barquin takes over the House version from Rep. Bryan Avila, who carried the 2020 version. The new legislation, filed ahead of the 2022 Legislative Session, has similarities to the prior version. The measures would require retail pet stores to obtain a license from the Department of Business and Professional regulation to sell animals. The legislation also requires those stores to only acquire animals from qualified breeders, animal rescues, animal shelters, pet brokers, or individuals who are exempt from licensure. That includes individuals who don’t routinely sell animals.
Happening today — The Collier County legislative delegation meets: Sen. Kathleen Passidomo; Reps. Bob Rommel, Lauren Melo and David Borrero, 9 a.m., North Collier Regional Park, 15000 Livingston Road, Naples.
Happening today — The Palm Beach County legislative delegation meets: Sens. Gayle Harrell, Bobby Powell, Tina Polsky and Lori Berman; Reps. Mike Caruso, Joe Casello, Omari Hardy, Rick Roth, David Silvers, Kelly Skidmore, Emily Slosberg, John Snyder and Matt Willhite, 10 a.m., Dolly Hand Cultural Arts Center, 1977 S.W. College Dr., Belle Glade.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Brian Ballard, Ballard Partners: NTT Data
Amy Bisceglia, AB Government Affairs: Aamz Food
Travis Blanton, Johnson & Blanton: Samsung Electronics America
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“‘Let these folks breathe’: DeSantis urges businesses to unmask employees” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — DeSantis blasted businesses Tuesday that require staff to wear masks while patrons roam mask-free, arguing the suggested rule disparity is symbolic of a “two-tiered society” wedged against the “servant class.” “Let these folks breathe,” DeSantis said at a news conference in Oldsmar. “Let them make their own decisions on this because I think it’s terribly uncomfortable that they’re in this for so many hours a day, and I don’t think it’s proven to make a difference.” The argument of a “servant class” is a spin on one of DeSantis’ primary arguments against public health mandates. They, he often says, divide Americans. In September, the Governor mounted a similar argument against COVID-19 vaccine passports and vowed to prevent a “biomedical security state” in Florida.
“In his new PSA, Florida Surgeon General touts treatments with little track record for COVID-19” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the Orlando Sentinel — Ladapo’s new PSA has angered physicians and medical experts who say the focus should be on COVID-19 prevention and more proven treatments. The 30-second PSA is part of the Florida Department of Health’s “Let’s Live” campaign and has aired on the department’s YouTube channel, on cable television stations such as the Golf Channel and is embedded on a state website called healthieryoufl.org. “We have always protected Floridians through innovative solutions and COVID-19 is no exception,” says Ladapo. He never mentions vaccines and the only reference is in a graphic listing them along with vitamins, exercise and nutrition as healthy ways to support one’s immune system. He also does not mention testing.
To watch the PSA, click on the image below:
“Ashley Moody recovers $11M from pandemic scams, cancellations” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Moody announced Tuesday Florida has recovered more than $11 million lost by consumers in pandemic-related fraud, scams and cancellations. Moody said her Consumer Protection Division is spearheading the ongoing recovery effort. To date, the Division has addressed thousands of consumer complaints, including reports of price gouging and wrongful cancellations, among others. The Division recently took on a travel company that left thousands stranded without travel arrangements. In a news release, Moody said the travel company, Bookit, offered to book flights, hotels and rental cars for consumers despite not having the funds to do so. The Division recovered roughly $7 million from Bookit after the company failed to refund stranded consumers.
“TMH relaxes COVID-19 visitor policy: ‘Family support is vital to the healing process’” via the Tallahassee Democrat — As COVID-19 continues to spread at lower levels in Leon County, the capital city’s largest hospital is relaxing its visitor policy put in place shortly after the pandemic was declared in March 2020. As the virus surged, the policy shifted multiple times, but it mostly restricted visitors to one or two at a time on a rotating basis. As of Dec. 2, Leon County’s positivity rate was at 2%. It rose to 3.75% on Dec. 7 and community transmission is labeled as “moderate.”
— 2022 —
DeSantis gets presidential odds boost — The Governor has seen a spike in support among bettors, leading oddsmaker BoyleSports to increase his chances of winning the 2024 presidential election from 8% to 12%. The boost puts DeSantis at No. 4 in the markets. “Although former President Donald Trump remains the firm favorite for the Republican Party nomination in the 2024 election, support for DeSantis is steady and his chances of getting into the White House in three years’ time are improving according to the latest betting moves as he is now 15/2 from 12/1,” BoyleSports spokesperson Sarah Kinsella said. Trump leads the way with a 25% chance, followed by Biden at 20% and Kamala Harris at 13%.
Fried campaign blasts ‘false and fraudulent’ Ethics Commission finding — Fried’s gubernatorial campaign slammed the state Ethics Commission for entertaining a complaint made by former Leon County GOP Chair Evan Power. The complaint, filed in June, centers on $400,000 in lobbying income Fried added to her 2018 financial disclosure via an amendment filed this year. Campaign spokesperson Drew Godinich said the Ethics Commission acted improperly by using the amended reports as probable cause to allow the complaint to move forward. “A disgraced Republican Party official filed a false and fraudulent ethics complaint against Commissioner Fried. Consistent with the administration’s regular practice of feeding false information to its subordinate agencies, Commissioner Fried is being attacked for following the law and showing transparency, exactly the opposite of what Republican Ron DeSantis and his cohorts do every day,” he said.
Wall Street Journal taps Tony Fabrizio for new polling operation — The Wall Street Journal is partnering with several prominent campaign pollsters for its new polling operation ahead of the 2022 midterms. Among the people involved is Fabrizio, Trump’s lead pollster during both presidential runs. The Ft. Lauderdale resident also served as a pollster for the presidential campaigns of Bob Dole, Rand Paul and Rick Perry. He and others working with WSJ will produce a new quarterly poll series detailing voter sentiment trends on key issues ahead of the midterm election.
“Jeff Brandes discusses reports of petition blocking, intimidation by Seminole Tribe” via Mark Parker of St. Pete Catalyst — Brandes is calling for an investigation into reports of petition blocking and voter intimidation. On Friday, he issued a news release calling for an investigation into allegations that the Seminole Tribe and their vendors are using paid petition blockers to bully, intimidate and harass Florida voters. Brandes found the reports “shocking.” “I think it’s unprofessional at best and unconscionable at worst,” said Brandes. “They can advertise all they want, but when you start harassing the petitioners who are simply trying to exercise their constitutional right to petition to change the constitution — that is completely out of balance.” Brandes said the Tribe’s tactics prevent voters from making a clear choice.
“Single-member districts will be back on ballet in Sarasota County special election next March” via Allyson Henning of WFLA — Back in 2018, 60% of Sarasota County voters approved a referendum for single-member districts. Tuesday night, Commissioners voted unanimously to bring the issue back to the ballot in a special election. Right now, Commissioners can only be elected by voters in the district where they live. With an at-large system, all voters can vote for all Commissioners on the board. The County Commission has expressed opposition to single-member districts on a number of occasions. Some have suggested residents didn’t understand what they were voting for back in 2018.
FAU poll: Party divide on climate change shrinks — Nearly nine out of 10 Florida Republicans believe climate change is real, according to a new survey released by Florida Atlantic University. While Florida Democrats register a higher belief rate at 96%, the GOP’s 88% represents a substantial increase over the past few years. FAU researchers said the Republican belief rate is “more than sufficient” for GOP lawmakers to embrace climate change science without blowback at the polls. The poll also found 72% of Floridians, including 60% of Republicans, support teaching climate change causes, consequences and solutions in K-12 classrooms, while 47% are willing to pay $10 per month to strengthen Florida’s infrastructure to weather hazards.
— CORONA NATION —
“Omicron raises vaccine questions a year after first Pfizer shot” via James Paton of Bloomberg — One year ago, a grandmother named Margaret Keenan, then 90 years old, rolled up her sleeve at University Hospital Coventry in the English midlands to take her place in history. Now, after 8 billion doses, the impact is clear. The vaccines have slashed hospitalizations and deaths in countries where they’ve been rolled out widely. In Europe alone, research shows they’ve saved about half a million lives among people aged 60 and over. And now, two years into the pandemic, there is omicron, a heavily mutated variant that emerged in recent weeks. It’s put the world on edge, leaving everyone desperately waiting for information on the severity of the strain and how well vaccines will work against it.
“Judge halts Joe Biden vaccine mandate for federal contractors nationwide” via John Kruzel of WFLA — A federal judge in Georgia on Tuesday temporarily halted the Biden administration’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate for federal contractors across the country. The ruling by U.S. District Judge R. Stan Baker, a Trump appointee, is the latest in a series of legal setbacks for Biden as his administration seeks to blunt the effects of a pandemic that has killed more than 788,000 people in the U.S. “The Court acknowledges the tragic toll that the COVID-19 pandemic has wrought throughout the nation and the globe,” Baker wrote in a 28-page ruling. “However, even in times of crisis this Court must preserve the rule of law and ensure that all branches of government act within the bounds of their constitutionally granted authorities.”
“Coronavirus vaccine demand grows in U.S. amid omicron variant concerns, booster eligibility expansion” via Annabelle Timsit of The Washington Post — Demand for coronavirus vaccines has spiked in the U.S. in recent weeks, as more Americans are eligible for booster shots and concerns grow over the omicron variant. Health care providers administered 2.18 million doses of coronavirus vaccines on Thursday — the “highest single-day total since May,” the White House said. For most of October, fewer than or slightly over 1 million doses of coronavirus vaccines were reported to the CDC as being administered every day in the United States. By mid-November, those numbers hovered around 1.5 million on average. In the past three reporting days, they neared or exceeded 2 million. The increased demand for coronavirus vaccines is largely driven by the demand for booster doses, CDC data shows.
“CDC: 60% of U.S. is fully vaccinated” via Oriana Gonzalez of Axios — Sixty percent of the U.S. population is fully vaccinated against COVID-19. This comes as the Omicron variant continues to spread across the U.S. It has been detected in 19 states, and the number is expected to increase, CDC director Rochelle Walensky said during Tuesday’s White House COVID-19 briefing. Walensky noted that the Delta variant is still the dominant strain in the U.S. Approximately 71% of the U.S. population has received at least one vaccine dose, and around 23% have had a booster shot. Some 64% of those over 5 years old are fully vaccinated. That number is around 72% for all adults.
“Is it time to change the definition of ‘fully vaccinated?’” via Victoria Knight, Kaiser Health News for the Tampa Bay Times — As more indoor venues require proof of vaccination for entrance and with winter as well as omicron, a new COVID-19 variant looming, scientists and public health officials are debating when it will be time to change the definition of “fully vaccinated” to include a booster shot. It’s been more than six months since many Americans finished their vaccination course against COVID-19; statistically, their immunity is waning. Some scientists point out that many vaccines involve three doses over six months for robust long-term protection, such as the shot against hepatitis. So “fully vaccinated” may need to include shot No. 3 to be considered a full course.
“How Biden can enlist insurance companies to get COVID-19 tests to all Americans” via Leana S. Wen of The Washington Post — When I first heard Biden announce that his administration will make rapid coronavirus tests free through insurance reimbursement, I thought it was a terrible plan. Upon more reflection, I think this could be an opportunity for Biden to enlist insurance companies in a new way that not only incentivizes testing but also vaccination and even preventive measures that go beyond COVID-19. Imagine if Biden could guarantee that everyone who has private or government-sponsored insurance — more than 91% of Americans — receives a monthly packet of at-home antigen tests, enough for all members of their household to test twice a week. It’s common sense that people are far more likely to use something if it’s conveniently delivered to their homes.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Americans’ pandemic-era ‘excess savings’ are dwindling for many” via Talmon Joseph Smith of The New York Times — Infusions of government cash that warded off an economic calamity have left millions of households with bigger bank balances than before the pandemic, savings that have driven a torrent of consumer spending, helped pay off debts and, at times, reduced the urgency of job hunts. But many low-income Americans find their savings dwindling or even depleted. And for them, the economic recovery is looking less buoyant. Over the past 18 months or so, experts have been closely tracking the multitrillion-dollar increase in what economists call “excess savings,” generally defined as the amount by which people’s cash reserves during the COVID-19 crisis exceeded what they would have normally saved.
“Billionaires’ wealth surged to record during pandemic, Piketty Lab says” via Augusta Saraiva and Alessandra Migliaccio of Bloomberg — The share of global wealth held by billionaires surged to a record during the COVID-19 crisis, according to a group founded by French economist Thomas Piketty. About 2,750 billionaires control 3.5% of the world’s wealth, the Paris-based Global Inequality Lab said in a report Tuesday. That’s up from 1% in 1995, with the fastest gains coming since the pandemic hit, the group said. The poorest half of the planet’s population owns about 2% of its riches.
— MORE CORONA —
“Why are we still isolating vaccinated people for 10 days?” via Katherine J. Wu of The Atlantic — For most fully vaccinated people, a breakthrough coronavirus infection will not ruin their health. It will, however, assuming that they follow all the relevant guidelines, ruin at least a week of their life. For at least those who have gotten all their necessary shots, we have the data and tools to slash the recommended length of isolation and the attendant burden by a lot, possibly even by half. Two years into the pandemic, we’re long overdue for a rethink on how vaccines affect our approach to outbreak control.
“Millennials, feeling their mortality during COVID-19, start writing their wills” via Veronica Dagher of The Wall Street Journal — Lawyers and financial advisers are hearing more frequently from younger people who want to get their affairs in order should they die unexpectedly. Thirty-two percent of the adults under 35 who wrote a will said it was because of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a 2020 survey by online legal documents company LegalZoom. Caring.com, a senior-care referral service, said about 27% of 18- to 34-year-olds had a will in 2021, compared with 18% in 2019. The largest factor driving the increase in millennials’ will-writing is continued uncertainty of whether they or their family will get sick.
“‘Omicron Family Restaurant’ embraces unfortunate turn of events with ‘corona’ T-shirts” via Devin Willems of Nexstar Media Wire — If only the rules of first come, first served applied to naming new variants of COVID-19, as one restaurant in Wisconsin now shares a name with the virus’s newest variant. Omicron Family Restaurant says they offer something for everyone and include multiple choices in their cuisine, which includes American, Greek, Italian, and Mexican foods. The restaurant is located in West Bend, which is about 40 miles north of Milwaukee. People apparently come in and take pictures with the sign. The restaurant also ordered custom T-shirts to help embrace the correlation between the new variant and the restaurant’s name. The shirts will only be available at the Omicron Family Restaurant starting after Dec. 13.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden bank cop nominee withdraws after pushback from moderate Dems” via Victoria Guida of POLITICO — Biden’s choice for a key role policing the nation’s banks withdrew her nomination Tuesday after facing pushback from several moderate Democrats, a rare defeat for the President on one of his personnel choices. Saule Omarova’s nomination as comptroller of the currency also met with fierce resistance from Republicans and business groups over her advocacy for a dominant role for government in finance, views that didn’t sit well with some Democrats either. Her confirmation process became increasingly unpleasant, with some GOP lawmakers suggesting that the Soviet-born academic had communist sympathies, an allegation she has vigorously denied. Omarova, who if confirmed would have overseen national banks, has repeatedly expressed concern about the size and reach of U.S. megabanks.
“Senate confirms Biden’s nominee to lead Customs and Border Protection” via Natalie Prieb of The Hill — Chris Magnus, the police chief for Tucson, Arizona, will lead the agency in charge of overseeing border security and travel. He was approved to the position by a vote of 50-47, with the only Republican vote coming from Sen. Susan Collins. Magnus worked for police departments in Michigan, North Dakota and California before joining the police department in Tucson in 2016, according to Reuters. The newest top border official, who made headlines during his time in California for holding up a “Black Lives Matter” sign while on the job in the midst of a demonstration, was a vocal critic of Trump’s immigration policies, writing in a 2017 op-ed for The New York Times that Trump’s policies were having a “chilling effect” on police-community relations.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Mitch McConnell secures GOP support for new debt strategy” via Burgess Everett and Heather Caygle of POLITICO — McConnell believes he’s convinced a skeptical Senate Republican Conference to allow Democrats to more easily raise the debt ceiling, a critical development as the country faces a mid-December debt cliff. The Senate minority leader spent Tuesday selling his members on a convoluted strategy that would require at least 10 Republicans to approve legislation that would later allow Senate Democrats to raise the debt ceiling by a simple majority vote. After a leadership meeting and a Senate GOP lunch, McConnell said he’d done enough work to clinch the deal in a vote expected on Thursday. Still, McConnell faced a “mixed” reception during a full party meeting, according to attendees, with what one member estimated as five to 10 Republicans speaking in opposition.
“Lawmakers rush to avert looming Medicare cuts” via Megan Wilson of POLITICO — Congress reached a deal on Tuesday to avert billions of dollars in impending Medicare cuts to hospitals, doctors and other providers that are set to take effect early next year. The Supporting Health Care Providers During the COVID-19 Pandemic Act, which has bipartisan support from leadership in the House and Senate, would blunt some of the cuts — but not all. Medicare providers have been pressing Congress all year to produce a solution — an effort that went into overdrive after lawmakers failed to include any fix in the short term funding bill approved late last week. Doctors could see Medicare payments decline nearly 10%, and hospitals 6%, if Congress doesn’t act by the end of the year.
“Rick Scott requests meeting with Adam Silver on NBA’s ‘unsettling’ China issues” via Ryan Gaydos of Fox News — Sen. Scott requested to meet with NBA Commissioner Silver in a letter on Monday to talk about a litany of the Senator’s concerns regarding the league’s relationship with China. In his letter, Scott mentioned his criticism of the NBA regarding how it handled Daryl Morey’s pro-Hong Kong tweet, the reported abuses at an NBA academy in China, and the failure of the league to insert itself into the geopolitical conversation when it comes to human rights abuses regarding Uyghur Muslims. Scott wrote that organizations like the NBA have a responsibility to speak out on human rights abuses and called on the league to be a “powerful voice of human rights.” The Republican wrote that he spoke with Boston Celtics center Enes Kanter Freedom and acknowledged his admiration for him as the player speaks out against China.
“GOP Rep. Dan Crenshaw calls members of House Freedom Caucus ‘grifters,’ ‘performance artists’” via Mariana Alfaro of The Washington Post — Rep. Crenshaw called out members of the House’s conservative Freedom Caucus, decrying them as “grifters” and “performance artists” who failed to support much of Trump’s agenda when he was in office and Republicans controlled Congress. Crenshaw made this assessment during an event this weekend with Republican congressional candidates in his hometown of Houston. Crenshaw said the conservative movement has “grifters in our midst, not here, not in this room. I mean in the conservative movement.” Crenshaw said his criticism was directed at “everybody in the Freedom Caucus — all of them,” and did not single out any specific GOP lawmaker.
“‘Carrie pushed the doors open.’ Rep. Carrie Meek’s legacy remembered at funeral” via C. Isaiah Smalls II of the Miami Herald — In life, Meek was a mother, teacher and activist who brought the demands of Miami’s most vulnerable to the halls of power in Tallahassee and Washington. In death, she brought the country’s most powerful politicians to Miami Gardens, where they charged everyone to pick up where she left off. Elected officials, ministers and hundreds of others touched by Meek’s work joined her family Tuesday at Antioch Missionary Baptist Church to honor the legacy of a woman who championed the voiceless at every turn. The funeral carried an air of regality, yet in true Meek fashion contained moments of disarming humor meant to move others to action.
— CRISIS —
“Top Mike Pence aide cooperating with Jan. 6 committee” via Jamie Gangel, Michael Warren and Ryan Nobles of CNN — Marc Short, the former chief of staff to Vice President Pence, is cooperating with the Jan. 6 committee, a significant development that will give investigators insight from one of the highest-ranking Trump officials, according to three sources with knowledge of the committee’s activities. The committee subpoenaed Short a few weeks ago. Short remains one of Pence’s closest advisers and is a firsthand witness to many critical events the committee is examining, including what happened to Pence at the Capitol on Jan. 6 and how Trump pressured the former Vice President not to certify the presidential election that day.
“DOJ aims to block key Steve Bannon defense strategy” via Kyle Cheney and Josh Gerstein of POLITICO — The Justice Department plans to try to block a central line of defense for Bannon in his upcoming trial for contempt of Congress: that his decision to stonewall Jan. 6 investigators was the result of his lawyer’s advice. “The Government anticipates filing a motion … to exclude evidence and argument relating to any advice of counsel on the basis that it is not a defense to the pending charges,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Amanda Vaughn said in a status report filed late Monday. Prosecutors did not explain in the report why they don’t think relying on his attorney’s advice is a defense for Bannon, who’s charged with “willfully” defying subpoenas for his testimony and records.
“U.S. Capitol Police inspector general says only a small number of recommendations after Jan. 6 attack have been adopted” via Mariana Alfaro of The Washington Post — U.S. Capitol Police Inspector General Michael Bolton, who is leading an investigation into why law enforcement failed to contain a pro-Trump mob on Jan. 6, said that only 30 of his 104 recommendations to make the Capitol complex “safe and secure” have been adopted. Not enough has been done to address the security flaws that led to the mob overwhelming Capitol Police officers, Bolton told the Senate Rules and Administration Committee on Tuesday. Additionally, Bolton said, out of the 200 security enhancements that the Capitol Police department has provided to his office, only 61 have “documentation to support those enhancements to have occurred.”
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Trump, Bill O’Reilly heading to Orlando on Sunday for ‘History Tour’” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — Trump is returning to Orlando’s Amway Center on Sunday, but instead of a free rally that kicked off his re-election campaign in 2019, this time supporters will have to pay big to see him. Tickets for the “History Tour,” featuring Trump and O’Reilly, start at $100 for upper deck seats and run into the thousands of dollars for VIP packages. It’s a notable change from Trump’s usual raucous rallies, held during his 2020 campaign in Sanford and The Villages. Trump also did campaign-style free events in Iowa and Georgia in October as he has repeatedly hinted at running for President again in 2024.
“Trump had wanted to pick Amy Coney Barrett instead of Brett Kavanaugh for second Supreme Court opening, former chief of staff says” via Felicia Sonmez of The Washington Post — Trump wanted to choose Barrett to be his second Supreme Court nominee in 2018 but ultimately chose Kavanaugh, a former top Trump aide writes in a new book. Mark Meadows, who was Trump’s chief of staff from 2020-2021, writes that Trump “had wanted to go to Justice Barrett before he nominated Brett Kavanaugh in 2018.” Meadows was a member of Congress and chair of the House Freedom Caucus when Trump chose Kavanaugh as his nominee to succeed Justice Anthony M. Kennedy on the country’s top court.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Nursing home deaths rose 25% after Hurricane Irma, study finds” via Erin Blakemore of The Washington Post — When Hurricane Irma barreled through Florida in 2017, it left suffering in its wake. As creeks and rivers overflowed and high winds battered the state, nearly two-thirds of Florida’s electricity customers lost power. When researchers matched the electricity outage statistic with Medicare claims for death and hospitalization, they found that nearly 28,000 nursing home residents, 65 and older, lost power during the storm. Those who lost power were subject to a 25% increase in deaths the first week and a 10% increase a month after the power loss. Residents between ages 65 and 74 were more likely to be hospitalized after the power went out, the study found.
“Christine King named chair of Miami Commission — the first woman to hold gavel” via Joey Flechas of the Miami Herald — King, the newly elected Commissioner representing Miami’s predominantly Black district, has been appointed chair of the City Commission. At Thursday’s meeting, she will be the first woman to hold the gavel and lead the Commission as they pass city laws and discuss public policy in Miami-Dade County’s largest municipality. On Tuesday, Miami Mayor Francis Suarez appointed King, the District 5 Commissioner, to control the flow of legislation and pace of meetings where the city government’s decision-makers debate and the public sounds off. Suarez also named Commissioner Joe Carollo as the vice-chair.
“North Miami Beach officials voted to up their compensation. Not everyone is on board” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — Just months after contentiously voting to give themselves city-funded health insurance, North Miami Beach Commissioners are again feuding over a decision to increase their own compensation, this time by setting aside money in expense accounts that can be spent as elected officials see fit. Late last month, Commissioners voted 4-3 to allow $6,500 from an “executive expense allowance” to be spent without restrictions, meaning the money could be used for personal expenses if Commissioners so choose. The vote happened after midnight after City Manager Arthur Sorey expressed confusion around how the money — made available when Commissioners voted 4-3 while setting their 2022 budget to increase expense accounts to $13,000 — could be spent.
“Real estate and oil tycoons avoided paying taxes for years” via Jeff Ernsthausen, Paul Kiel and Jesse Eisinger of ProPublica — Stephen Ross, who founded Related Companies, was a massive winner between 2008 and 2017. He became the second-wealthiest real estate titan in America, almost doubling his net worth over those years, according to Forbes’ annual list, adding $3 billion to his fortune. His assets included a penthouse apartment overlooking Central Park and the Miami Dolphins. Then there’s the other Ross, the big loser — the one depicted on his tax returns. Though the developer brought in some $1.5 billion in income from 2008 to 2017, he reported even more — nearly $2 billion — in losses. And because he reported negative income, he didn’t pay a nickel in federal income taxes over those 10 years.
“Men tied to Italian mob money-laundering case still able to snap up South Florida properties” via Ben Weider, Shirsho Dasgupta and Karen Wang of the Miami Herald — In March 2013, Italian real estate developer Antonio Velardo was charged in two separate real estate money-laundering probes connected to organized crime in Italy. But by then, he and three other associates had already turned their attention to a new target: South Florida. As they would soon learn, the charges were no impediment to snapping up millions of dollars’ worth of property in Florida. Companies tied to the four men have purchased more than 130 homes in the state since 2012 — the bulk of them in Miami-Dade County. A hundred of the homes were purchased after Velardo was charged, a Miami Herald analysis of property records found.
“Venice Middle School students disciplined after chanting ‘(****) Joe Biden,’ drawing swastika” via Ryan McKinnon of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — A group of Venice Middle School students in the Sarasota County School District has been disciplined after chanting “(expletive) Joe Biden” on the school bus last week, and one student drew a swastika on the bus windows. According to District spokesman Craig Maniglia, five students received disciplinary referrals for inappropriate language for taking part in the chant, which has gained increased attention recently after a euphemism for the phrase, “Let’s Go Brandon” started trending. The school principal sent a letter home to the parent of the boy who started the chant, and Maniglia said they were “very supportive” of the school’s disciplinary action.
“Is math education racist? Jacksonville educator shows how to make the subject more culturally inclusive” via Emily Bloch, Erin Richards, Gary Stern and Christine Fernando of The Florida Times-Union — Schools are collapsing math “tracks” to put kids of all abilities in the same classes and adding data science courses that carry the same prestige as calculus, long seen as a gateway to a career in STEM fields and elite colleges. Another heated issue: the extent to which math education should include real-world problems involving racial and social inequities. Fairly or not, that debate has landed in the murky soup of “critical race theory” digressions. The changes have pitted mathematicians and math educators against each other and sparked criticism from affluent parents upset by the elimination of gifted tracks.
“Planned National POW-MIA Memorial and Museum taking flight in Jacksonville after COVID-19 delay” via Teresa Stepzinski of The Florida Times-Union — Nearly two years after ground was broken, construction is underway on the planned national memorial and museum in Jacksonville to honor and remember all American prisoners of war and those missing in action during the country’s wars. When completed, it will be the first of its kind in the United States. The planned National POW/MIA Memorial and Museum will pay homage to all those classified as prisoners of war or missing in action from World War II through current conflicts, Mike Cassata, organization executive director, told the Times-Union.
“Tallahassee candidate, FSU officials spar over $20M stadium Blueprint request” via Tristan Wood of Florida Politics — Tallahassee City Commission candidate Adner Marcelin is pressuring Florida State University President Richard McCullough to pull the university’s $20 million Blueprint request for Doak S. Campbell stadium renovations. Marcelin, the former president of the Tallahassee branch of the NAACP and an FSU alum, has made opposition to the Blueprint funding a pillar of his campaign. He told Florida Politics he decided to run after hearing citizen concerns about the project during the Tallahassee NAACP’s “Say No 2 Doak” town hall last month. In a letter to McCullough, Marcelin said the funding request could drive a wedge between Tallahassee and FSU residents by keeping the money from going to other areas.
“UF signs deal to take over Scripps Florida” via Joel Engelhardt of On Gardens — Fifteen years ago, the state put up $310 million and Palm Beach County put up $269 million to bring The Scripps Research Institute to Abacoa. Last month, Scripps agreed to hand it all over to the University of Florida for $100. Without saying why, the La Jolla, California-based nonprofit agreed to give UF the three main science buildings built with Palm Beach County money, the state-of-the-art robotics and the vacant 70 acres in Alton set aside for biotech development, a Nov. 15 Asset Transfer Agreement shows. Also, the agreement says Scripps will give UF $102 million in cash on hand, most of it apparently committed to ongoing projects, minus $3 million for transition costs.
— TOP OPINION —
“In Georgia, Republicans’ Faustian bargain with Trump is catching up with them” via Eugene Robinson of The Washington Post — Anyone who thinks the Republican Party is some kind of well-oiled juggernaut ready to steamroll Democrats in November might want to check out what’s happening in Georgia, where the GOP is busy trying to steamroll itself. Brian Kemp, who is seeking re-election, got bad news last week when he learned that his likely Democratic opponent will be Stacey Abrams, who came within a hair of beating him in 2018. He got worse news on Monday, when former Sen. David Perdue, defeated in his re-election bid in Jan., announced he will challenge Kemp in the GOP gubernatorial primary. In what for decades has been a reliably red state, the Republican Party has lost both U.S. Senate seats to Democrats and stands a real chance of losing the Governor’s mansion as well.
— OPINIONS —
“Green for the blue: Reimbursing police who lost pay because of COVID-19” via Jimmy Patronis for the Tallahassee Democrat — Police are being fired because of vaccine mandates. Thank God for leaders like DeSantis who said “enough is enough” when it comes to mandates. I got the vaccine, but I don’t believe in mandates. When COVID-19 was hitting our nation the hardest, I issued a directive covering state first responders for workers’ compensation. However, workers’ comp claims just don’t cover all the bills. That’s why this Session the Legislature should consider covering the lost pay of any law enforcement officers hospitalized as a result of COVID-19. This would be a “Bridge for the Badge,” something that would provide a monetary bridge to families of law enforcement as their loved one dealt with COVID-19.
“The ‘Latinx community’ doesn’t want to be called ‘Latinx.’ Just drop it, progressives” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Dear progressive politicians, pundits and media friends: Stop trying to make the term “Latinx” a thing. Trust us here in Miami, where, Ya tu sabes, we drink cafecitos and parental discipline is usually delivered with a chancleta. The so-called “Latinx community” doesn’t even want to be called Latinx. That’s the finding of a new national poll by Bendixen & Amandi International, a Miami-based Democratic firm focusing on Latino — and we mean Latino — outreach. The survey of 800 registered voters of Latin American descent found that a meager 2% described themselves as Latinx. The majority (68%) preferred “Hispanic” or “Latina/Latino” (21%). In Miami, whenever possible, we advise you call them Cuban, Colombian, Venezuelan, Dominican, Argentine, etc. And please don’t call Brazilians Hispanic — they speak Portuguese, not Spanish.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
DeSantis is pledging to defend freedom as Florida sees its first few cases of the new COVID-19 variant.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— As the Supreme Court weighs the future of the landmark Roe v. Wade decision, we talk with the outgoing leader of Planned Parenthood in Florida. Today’s interview is with Lillian Tamayo, who is passing the baton after 22 years of service. She shares her views on the current threats facing access to abortion both in Florida and across the country.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Gamblers may be entitled to refunds from Hard Rock Sportsbook app, experts say” via Jordan Bowen of Fox 13 Tampa Bay — The Hard Rock Sportsbook app shut down Saturday, more than a month after a federal court ruling deeming the Seminole Tribe’s Gaming Compact with the state illegal. But there are still many questions about what will happen to the money that was made while the app was in operation. “There is no more authority of law under which these bets were being placed. And it sets up a really interesting dynamic whether the Seminole Tribe will either voluntarily refund money to customers who requested or fight or resist those overtures. And it will lead to litigation,” attorney and gaming law expert Daniel Wallach said.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Best wishes to Allison Ager, our friend Mike Deeson, MSNBC’s Joy-Ann Reid, and Ben Smith.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
5.) MORNING BREW
|
BECOME SMARTER IN JUST 5 MINUTES
Get the daily email that makes reading the news actually enjoyable. Stay informed and entertained, for free.
6.) THE FACTUAL
|
7.) LIBERTY NATION
|
|
|
|
8.) FOX NEWS
9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
10.) THE FEDERALIST PAPERS
11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
|
12.) THE FLIP SIDE
- Subscribe
- Past Issues
- RSS
- Translate
|
13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
🐪 Happy Wednesday. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,186 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
🔬 At 12:30 p.m. ET today, please join Axios’ Caitlin Owens for a virtual event exploring pandemic-era innovations and the impact on health care in ’22 and beyond. Guests include Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.) and Scripps Research president and CEO Pete Schultz. Register here.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Public health officials are warning that the U.S. may be on the verge of a dangerous double whammy: COVID and flu, spreading simultaneously, Axios health care editor Tina Reed writes.
- Why it matters: The Delta variant is still circulating across the U.S., and the Omicron variant isn’t far behind. On top of that, experts see potential warning signs of a bad flu season, which could leave millions of Americans vulnerable and strain health care resources.
By the numbers: Just 60% of Americans are fully vaccinated against COVID.
- 41% of adults have gotten a flu shot, according to the CDC, as have 39% of children — significantly lower than the same point last year.
State of play: The CDC has said flu activity is still low nationwide, but recently issued a warning to providers about the early circulation of a strain of flu known as influenza A (H3N2).
- Previous seasons in which that virus was the predominant strain saw more hospitalizations and deaths among people 65 and older.
Photo illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios. Photo: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images
Testifying before Congress for the first time, Instagram head Adam Mosseri will be grilled about protections for youngsters online — one of the areas lawmakers are most interested in regulating.
- Why it matters: Republicans and Democrats have found common ground in grilling tech companies on how their products harm children, Axios’ Margaret Harding McGill writes.
Mosseri’s appearance before the Senate Commerce consumer protection subcommittee comes three months after The Wall Street Journal revealed Instagram research about effects on the mental health of teen girls.
- Ahead of the hearing, Mosseri announced changes to better protect young users — including a “Take a Break” feature to alert a user who’s been scrolling more than a preset amount of time.
- Another feature will nudge teens toward different topics if they’ve been dwelling on one.
- The company announced a March launch for tools parents can use to see — and limit— how much time their kids spend on Instagram.
🔮 What we’re watching: We expect Mosseri to emphasize Instagram’s commitment to sharing data with researchers + the company’s support for regulations on verifying the age of users.
If the Supreme Court weakens Roe v. Wade, some advocates fear a ripple effect that could undermine other precedent-setting cases, including civil rights and LGBTQ protections, AP’s Lindsay Whitehurst writes.
- Landmark LGBTQ precedents “stand on the foundation of cases protecting reproductive justice … [Planned Parenthood vs.] Casey and Roe vs. Wade,” said Camilla Taylor, litigation director at Lambda Legal.
Catch up quick: The Supreme Court’s conservative majority signaled in arguments last week they would allow states to ban abortion much earlier in pregnancy and may even overturn the nationwide right that has existed for nearly 50 years. A decision is expected next summer.
The other side: Anti-abortion advocates and some legal scholars argue that the Roe decision was unique, both in its legal reasoning and effects, and so overturning it wouldn’t affect other landmark cases.
Lawmakers applaud outgoing German Chancellor Angela Merkel in the Bundestag in Berlin today. Photo: Stefanie Loos via AP
Social Democrat Olaf Scholz, 63, was sworn in as chancellor of Germany today, succeeding conservative Angela Merkel after 16 years and launching a new era of German and European politics.
- He’ll lead what’s being called a “traffic light” coalition — after the parties’ colors of red, green and yellow.
Why it matters: Climate change, more progressive social and economic policies, and a stronger EU are central planks of the Social Democratic platform, Axios’ Zachary Basu writes.
Scholz positioned himself as Merkel’s natural successor and a safe pair of hands to steer Germany through challenges that include a more confrontational Russia and China, Reuters reports.
- After serving as mayor of the northern port city of Hamburg from 2011-2018, Scholz returned to Berlin as Merkel’s finance minister.
🥊 In the last of more than 660 podcasts Merkel recorded in office, she made a farewell plea to Germans to get vaccinated.
Go deeper: Why Merkel mattered, by Axios World author Dave Lawler.
Congress found a shortcut to pass its annual defense funding bill and raise the debt limit, Axios’ Alayna Treene writes.
Why it matters: These two huge pieces of legislation cleared the House last night and are now expected to pass the Senate with ease.
- It’s a huge victory for congressional leaders, given most in the Capitol expected the process to be brutal and messy.
Bruce Mehlman of Mehlman Castagnetti is out with an illuminating “Top 2022 Risks” deck, which includes “cyber insecurity.”
- The sobering data above comes from the Zero Day Tracking Project, which defines a zero-day vulnerability as an undisclosed software flaw “when there is no solution provided from [the] software vendor and the vulnerability is being actively exploited by malicious actors.”
The unbelievable rise in used-cars prices — the poster child for supply chain disruption — is finally slowing after a year-over-year increase of 44%, Axios business editor Kate Marino writes.
- Wholesale used-car prices (what dealers pay) rose 3.9% in November, following a 9.2% surge in October.
What’s happening: “Wholesale prices appear to have peaked the week before Thanksgiving as weekly prices have declined slightly in each of the last 2 weeks,” wrote Jonathan Smoke, chief economist at Cox Automotive, which publishes the Manheim Used Vehicle Value Index.
Reality check: Retail price trends lag wholesale — and for now, retail prices continue to increase, Smoke said.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
New York City, the nation’s largest school district, is building an Uber-like GPS system that lets parents track their child’s school bus ride in real time, Axios’ Jennifer A. Kingson writes.
- NYC, with 1 million pupils, has contracted with Via Transportation to start phasing in student tracking next fall.
Why it matters: For parents, teachers and school administrators, the ability to follow each student’s daily commute adds a layer of safety and peace of mind — and helps everyone adjust plans when there are traffic jams or other snarls.
Similar systems are already deployed in San Francisco (3,500 students) and Oakland (1,500 students) through a Bay Area company called Zūm.
- Each kid gets a QR code (on a printout or a phone) that’s scanned when they get on and off their school bus.
- Schools and bus operators have consoles that track buses and students.
Between the lines: These systems reduce the likelihood of a sleeping child being left on a bus, or of children boarding the wrong bus or getting off at the wrong stop.
- But “big brother” concerns about children’s privacy have been raised, and labor unions have complained about extra responsibilities for their members.
Both Via and Zūm say school districts can save money by using their software and algorithms to map more efficient bus routes.
📬 Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up here for your own copy of Axios AM and Axios PM.
14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
|
|
|
17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
|
18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Illinois’ first Omicron variant case confirmed in Chicago resident
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
|
23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
Rep. Devin Nunes holds an enviable war chest of more than $12 million heading into next year’s elections. Even after announcing Monday he would soon abandon his seat, Nunes is under no obligation to purge the money or return it to donors. The phrase “you can’t take it with you” doesn’t apply to departing members of Congress. Read more…
The House passed a compromise version of the annual defense policy bill Tuesday by a vote of 363-70. The fiscal 2022 National Defense Authorization Act would authorize $768.1 billion in defense spending, $25 billion more than requested by President Joe Biden. The big increase split Democrats, with 51 of them voting against the bill. Read more…
Biden goes from a contrast to Trump to a contrast to competency
OPINION — Joe Biden needs to accept that simply not being Donald Trump isn’t actually being president. He’s had a bad year, and it’s time he stepped up and owned it. If he doesn’t, next year could be worse. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
House passes debt limit process, Medicare cuts delay bill
The House passed legislation Tuesday that would limit Senate debate on a separate debt ceiling increase bill to 10 hours, creating a temporary loophole in that chamber’s 60-vote legislative filibuster rules. The bill, which would also delay scheduled cuts in Medicare and other programs, passed on a 222-212 vote. Read more…
Manchin repeats call for ‘strategic pause’ in big spending package
Speaking Tuesday at The Wall Street Journal’s CEO Council Summit, Sen. Joe Manchin III said he still wants Democrats to slow down consideration of the House-passed $2.2 trillion climate and social spending package given “unknowns” in the economy. Read more…
Rep. Don Bacon acknowledges his brand of pragmatic politics that prizes compromise and decency may be a bit of a throwback in these aggressively partisan times. But in an interview with CQ Roll Call, the Nebraska Republican said that’s what voters — at least, swing voters in the suburbs — want. Read more…
Commission sends Biden report on Supreme Court overhauls
The White House commission on the Supreme Court unanimously voted Tuesday to send its report to President Joe Biden, but as expected it makes no recommendation on contentious overhaul proposals such as term limits for justices or expanding the number of justices. Read more…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2021 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
1201 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Suite 600
Washington, DC 20004
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: ‘The least bad deal’
DRIVING THE DAY
PAGING PELOSI — WaPo’s Marianna Sotomayor and Jacqueline Alemany scooped just before midnight that Rep. AYANNA PRESSLEY (D-Mass.) and other House progressives plan to introduce a resolution today stripping Rep. LAUREN BOEBERT (R-Colo.) from her committee posts for Islamophobic comments. Their hope? To pressure Democratic leaders into taking action they’ve resisted taking since the spat with ILHAN OMAR began two weeks ago.
MCCONNELL’S DEBT CEILING ESCAPE — The idea started out promising, at least from the GOP’s perspective. Over the summer, MITCH MCCONNELL surprised much of Washington when he drew a bright line on the debt ceiling, demanding Democrats use reconciliation to raise the borrowing cap on their own. The idea was to force President JOE BIDEN’s party to vote to increase the $29 trillion debt by a specific number — then hammer them for out-of-control spending on the camping trail. Republicans cheered.
But while McConnell struck a deal with CHUCK SCHUMER on Tuesday that will ultimately achieve the same result, his method of getting there has left many of his own rank-and-file members unhappy. Instead of gumming up the works by forcing Democrats to use reconciliation, he agreed to a convoluted strategy that enables Democrats to bypass the filibuster.
It goes like this: At least 10 Republicans will have to join Democrats as early as Thursday in approving new legislation allowing Schumer’s party to temporarily raise the debt ceiling by a simple majority vote. Maybe they’ll get more GOP backing; but maybe not.
Senate Republicans, we hear, didn’t exactly embrace the plan when McConnell presented it at the weekly conference lunch on Tuesday — though McConnell predicted there will be enough votes joining him for passage. At least two Republicans who voted in October to temporarily lift the debt ceiling have said they won’t go along with the latest strategy; one of them, Sen. RICHARD SHELBY (R-Ala.), said, “We ought to keep our word with the base.”
Even McConnell’s own leadership team wasn’t thrilled. “I’m not supporting any raising the debt ceiling,” NRSC Chairman RICK SCOTT (R-Fla.) told Playbook after the lunch. “I’m gonna have to think it through,” Sen. JONI ERNST (R-Iowa) added. “It may be as good as we could do,” shrugged Sen. ROY BLUNT (R-Mo.), a McConnell ally who plans to support the agreement, in an interview. “It’s easier to second guess the leaders than it is to actually be one … I’m not going to do that.”
SO WAS IT A CAVE OR A WIN? — Here’s what the various factions of the party are saying:
1) The view from McConnell: “The red line is intact,” he declared to reporters Tuesday, suggesting he never moved the goalposts. The deal, he added, is “good for the country” and “good for Republicans.”
Translation from McConnell World: He got Democrats to own the debt ceiling increase, which is what he wanted all along. He didn’t care how they got there, or if they used reconciliation to do it, or another process. This solution will still allow the GOP to grill Democrats for reckless spending.
2) The view from McConnell critics: “I don’t think Republicans should be facilitating adding trillions in debt,” Sen. TED CRUZ (R-Texas) said.
Translation from this POV: McConnell took a stand — that Democrats should use reconciliation — then backpedaled and paved the way for them. In the process, he cleared the decks for Schumer and the Democrats to focus on passing Build Back Better before Christmas — and created a new precedent for bypassing the filibuster to raise the debt ceiling. (While the law is only “temporary,” what’s been done once can — and likely will — be done again.)
3) The view from sympathetic Republicans: “It’s impossible to please everybody, but [McConnell’s] responsibility is to the nation as well as to his constituents … It may be the least bad deal,” said Sen. KEVIN CRAMER (R-N.D). “I wouldn’t call it a great deal or a good deal.”
Translation: McConnell took the most responsible path. Even if he relented somewhat, Republicans couldn’t risk a default, especially in the middle of a pandemic.
SO WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR MCCONNELL? He’s been under constant attack from DONALD TRUMP all year, including after the GOP leader agreed to the last short-term hike in October. The ex-president will almost certainly use this process to hammer him even more. But so far, at least, McConnell’s standing with rank-and-file Republican senators hasn’t been hurt by the debt ceiling machinations. He’ll probably be OK with that core constituency after this latest round, too.
Still, McConnell is cleaning up a mess he arguably made himself. The debt ceiling had typically been dealt with on a bipartisan basis in the Senate — until McConnell drew his red line. He could have left precedent alone and avoided this headache. We’ll see in the long run if it was worth it politically for the GOP.
More headlines: “McConnell faces GOP pushback on debt deal,” by The Hill’s Jordain Carney … “House Republicans seethe over Senate GOP’s debt deal,” by Olivia Beavers and Burgess Everett … “U.S. House passes bill to speed passage of debt limit increase,” from Reuters
Good Wednesday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
BIDEN’S WEDNESDAY:
— 9:30 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 10:50 a.m.: Biden will depart the White House en route to Kansas City, Mo., where he is scheduled to arrive at 1:45 p.m.
— 3 p.m.: Biden will tour the Kansas City Area Transportation Authority, where he will deliver remarks at 3:30 p.m.
— 4:45 p.m.: Biden will depart Kansas City to return to the White House, where he is scheduled to arrive at 7:15 p.m.
Principal deputy press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE will gaggle aboard Air Force One en route to Kansas City.
The SENATE is in. Instagram CEO ADAM MOSSERI will testify before the Commerce Committee at 2:30 p.m.
The HOUSE will meet at 10 a.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE WHITE HOUSE
VACCINE MANDATE BLOCKED … AGAIN — A federal judge in Georgia blocked Biden’s vaccine mandate for federal contract workers across the country, CNN’s Tierney Sneed reports: “The order means that all three major Biden vaccine policies for people not employed by the federal government — the mandates for contractors, certain health care workers and employees of larger companies — are frozen across the country. The contractor mandate had already been blocked in Kentucky, Ohio and Tennessee after an order was issued in a separate case.”
TWO TENSION-FILLED HOURS — Two grafs at the top of NYT’s David Sanger and Michael Crowley story on the Biden-Putin meeting — which “American and Russian officials both described as tense but occasionally pierced by humor” — tell you pretty much everything there is to know about it, which isn’t much: “It is too early to tell whether the much-anticipated conversation, whose details were hard to elicit as both the White House and the Kremlin put their spin on it, will alleviate the immediate crisis in Ukraine, where roughly 70,000 Russian troops have massed, with more equipment and personnel arriving every day.
“Mr. Putin gave no indication of his ultimate intent, leaving the world guessing whether he was actually planning an invasion early next year, or trying to get the West to pay attention to his demands by manufacturing a crisis.” Five takeaways from Crowley
BANK COP NOMINATION PULLED — From WaPo’s Amy Wang and Tory Newmyer: “SAULE OMAROVA, Biden’s pick to serve as a top banking regulator, has withdrawn her nomination for the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Omarova had faced pushback to her nomination from Republicans as well as moderate Democrats. During Omarova’s confirmation hearing last month, Sen. JOHN NEELY KENNEDY (R-La.) had suggested that her upbringing in Soviet-controlled Kazakhstan indicated a possible Communist loyalty.”
VEEP WATCH
PROVING HER NAYSAYERS WRONG — In a private meeting this week, Black women leaders shared some policy recommendations with Vice President KAMALA HARRIS on policy. But they also made a more personal appeal to Harris: To prove her detractors wrong, Eugene reports.
“The Black community, they stressed, wanted to see more of her, and they wanted to be called on more to help out where they could, serving as her ‘ambassadors.’ There was a sense of shared protectiveness over the accomplishments of Harris as the first woman of color to serve in the executive office, with multiple women who attended the meeting saying they wanted to make sure that the first chance that Black women have to lead is successful.
“Harris urged those in attendance to give it to her straight, attendees said: What are people saying? she asked. And when they suggested the need for more public updates on what she’s been working on, Harris seemed receptive, including expressing openness to holding town halls on various topics she’s working closely on — from voting rights to other issues facing Black people in the country.”
ALL POLITICS
BEHIND THE NUNES RETIREMENT — Rep. DEVIN NUNES (R-Calif.) announced his retirement this week, and NYT’s Jonathan Weisman writes that he was “prodded toward that decision in large part by the nonpartisan California Citizens Redistricting Commission, which this week is putting the finishing touches on new boundaries. The plan is likely to transform the district he has represented for 19 years from a dusty, rural swath that voted for Mr. Trump in 2020 by 5 percentage points into one centered here in Fresno, the fifth-largest city in California, which Biden would have carried handily.”
ON SECOND THOUGHT — MATTHEW DOWD, the former political strategist for GEORGE W. BUSH, ended his campaign for Texas’ lieutenant governor Tuesday, saying “he was dropping out of the race to make way for a more diverse field of candidates,” according to the Texas Tribune’s James Barragán.
POLICY CORNER
DON’T CALL IT FILIBUSTER REFORM — After trying (and failing) to pass voting rights bills four times through the Senate, a group of chamber Democrats are considering other rules changes they think could free voting legislation, our Laura Barrón-López and Marianne Levine report in a new story up today. “Rather than the draconian step of tossing out the filibuster, they’re debating other possible rule changes to the chamber that could pave the way for election reform bills that are viewed by Democrats as paramount to combatting restrictive new voting laws and preserving democracy.”
CBP’S GOT A LEADER — The Senate confirmed CHRIS MAGNUS to lead the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency Tuesday “after months of confirmation setbacks that left the agency with a void at the top amid a record number of border arrests,” CNN’s Priscilla Alvarez and Geneva Sands report. “The vote was 50-47, with Republican Sen. SUSAN COLLINS of Maine voting in favor of Magnus.”
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
CHINA HITS BACK — Following the news of the Biden administration’s diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Olympic Winter games, China Tuesday accused the U.S. of “violating the Olympic spirit,” AP reports. Foreign Ministry spokesperson ZHAO LIJIAN said the move “seriously violates the principle of political neutrality of sports established by the Olympic Charter and runs counter to the Olympic motto ‘more united.’”
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The Google News Initiative is donating $500,000 to First Look Institute’s Press Freedom Defense Fund today, the media support organization will announce. PFDF is funding much of the legal team defending Nobel Peace Prize winning Filipino-American MARIA RESSA, who was arrested for reporting in the Philippines.
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
HAVING A MELTDOWN — The Robert E. Lee statue in Charlottesville that was taken down this summer “will be melted down and turned into a new piece of public artwork, following a vote by city lawmakers early Tuesday morning,” WaPo’s Teo Armus reports. “The Charlottesville City Council voted 4 to 0 to hand it over to the only local bidder: the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center, a Black-led museum that proposed repurposing the metal entirely.”
JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH
MEADOWS LATEST — The House select committee on Jan. 6 threatened to charge former chief of staff MARK MEADOWS with contempt if he did not participate in an interview Wednesday. Meadows notified the committee Tuesday that “he was no longer willing to sit for an interview with its investigators, reversing a deal he reached with the panel just last week to attend a deposition.” NYT’s Luke Broadwater and Maggie Haberman have more
PLAYBOOKERS
Joe Manchin referred to Democrats as the third-person “they” (instead of the first-person “we”) at a WSJ event.
Dan Crenshaw called members of the House Freedom Caucus “performance artists” and “grifters” in a now-viral clip from a Houston-area campaign event over the weekend.
Nancy Mace talked big cats with “Tiger King” star Carole Baskin.
Chris Cuomo’s planned book on “the harsh truths that the pandemic and Trump years have exposed about America,” “Deep Denial,” has been canceled.
Julia Child’s 3,150-square-foot Georgetown home has been listed for $3.5 million, per Vanity Fair.
Jussie Smollett testified that Don Lemon advised the actor in 2019 after he was accused of faking a hate crime against himself.
Bob Dole’s former campaign manager remembers his former boss as “a pragmatist and a realist.”
Matt Gaetz said that if Republicans win back the House in 2022, he will mount an effort to make Donald Trump speaker of the House. (h/t Alexander Nazaryan)
Ray Dalio is in Washington this week meeting with Biden officials. He had dinner last night with Olivia Nuzzi, Ryan Lizza, Tim Mak, Kayla Tausche and Jon Swan at the home of Jamie and Michelle Fields Weinstein.
OUT AND ABOUT — SPOTTED at the French Ambassador’s residence for the presentation of the American Abroad Media Award for “The French Village”: Josh Dawsey, Paula Dobriansky, Marc Ginsberg, James Jeffrey, Robert Satoff, John Hannah, Peter Ackerman, Ben Wittes, Christian Davenport, Max Neuberger, Diane Zeleny, Victor Shilbie, Anna Gawel and Wallace Karen.
— The Transatlantic Leadership Network launched the “Freedom of the Media” annual awards at the National Press Club on Tuesday night. Awardees included Jackson Diehl of The Washington Post, Fairouz Ziani of Al Jazeera, Lebanese MTV Chairman Michel Gabriel El Murr, Ukrainian journalist Natalie Sedletska and Bosnian publisher Mujo Selimović. More info
MEDIA MOVE — Julia Chan is joining The 19th News as editor in chief. She most recently was managing editor of digital at KQED. The announcement
TRANSITIONS — Sydney Pettit is now director of government affairs at CTIA. She previously was a legislative assistant for Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.). … Lori Wallach is joining the American Economic Liberties Project as director of its Rethink Trade program. She currently is director of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch. … Dilara Yilmaz has launched Yilmaz Communications, her own political and advocacy consulting group. She previously was chief comms officer for foreign policy and national security at the British Embassy. …
… Brendan Summers, Larry Sanders and Sarah Lindstrom are joining Blue State. Summers will be SVP of campaigns and previously operated his own consulting practice. Sanders will be a writer and previously was an email and SMS strategist at the DNC. Lindstrom will be a senior strategist and previously was digital director for Theresa Greenfield’s Iowa Senate campaign.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: POLITICO’s Annie Yu and Danica Stanciu … WSJ’s Sabrina Siddiqui … Fox News’ Kerri Kupec …AP’s Pablo Martínez Monsiváis … NBC’s Cesar Conde and Tom Mazzarelli … Debra Saunders … Judd Legum … B.R. McConnon of DDC Public Affairs … CBS’ Brooke Lorenz … ABC’s Marc Burstein … Microsoft’s Ginny Badanes … P. Lynn Scarlett … Siemens’ Brie Sachse … NBC’s Elyse Perlmutter-Gumbiner … Ann Coulter … Retired Gen. Joe Dunford … Stephen Spaulding of Common Cause … Mark Piland of Rep. Ralph Norman’s (R-S.C.) office … former World Bank President Jim Yong Kim … Karen Keller … Preston Hill … Steve Bouchard … former Rep. Raúl Labrador (R-Idaho) … Sylvester Okere … Courtney Johnson … Luis Rosero … State Department’s Anna Miller … Tom Bush … Lizzie O’Leary … Rachel Sklar … Tanika Pradhan … Gillian Diebold of the Center for Data Innovation … Kathleen Bell
Did someone forward this email to you? Sign up here.
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
Follow us on Twitter
26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
|
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
|
29.) PJ MEDIA
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Biden Warns Putin Against Ukraine Invasion
Plus: Lawmakers say reforming the Electoral Count Act is necessary post-January 6.
The Dispatch Staff |
Happy Wednesday! A big thanks to everyone who responded to yesterday’s Let Us Know about TMD occasionally getting cut off in your email inbox. Today’s edition is likely going to get truncated, too.
The issue seems to primarily affect Gmail users, because Google automatically clips any email that includes more than 102 KB worth of words and images. Thanks for bearing with us while we work on a solution—and remember, you can always read the newsletter online here!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- An early, non-peer-reviewed study out of South Africa published yesterday found that the Omicron variant is able to partially escape the immunity conferred by the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine, but—because the variant still relies on cells’ ACE2 receptor—prior infection and vaccination/boosters are likely to continue protecting against severe disease and death. “I thought this news was very positive,” Alex Sigal—the study’s leader—told CNN. “My impression is if you get a booster you are protected, especially against severe disease.”
- The House voted 363-70 on Tuesday to advance the approximately $770 billion National Defense Authorization Act that funds the military and other national security programs for the year. The package—which still needs to pass the Senate—reforms how sexual assault in the military is addressed, creates an independent commission to investigate the Afghanistan war and the United States’ withdrawal, raises military pay by 2.7 percent, and boosts aid to Ukrainian security forces. Lawmakers scrapped a proposal earlier this week that would have required women to register for the military draft.
- The House also voted 222-212 Tuesday to advance a measure that will allow congressional Democrats to raise the debt ceiling on their own, provided at least 10 Senate Republicans agree not to filibuster the move. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters yesterday he’s “confident” the plan will succeed and stave off a potential default.
- The White House’s bipartisan Supreme Court Commission voted unanimously on Tuesday to send its final report—which “takes no position” on court packing due to “profound disagreement among Commissioners”—to President Joe Biden.
- Australia on Tuesday joined the U.S.’s’ diplomatic boycott of the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. The Chinese Communist Party condemned the United States’ boycott yesterday, with spokesman Zhao Lijian telling reporters America will “pay a price” for its decision to violate the Olympics’ “principle of political neutrality.”
- Instagram announced a suite of new features yesterday aimed at improving teen safety and mental health. The company said it will begin nudging young users to “Take A Break” when they’ve been scrolling for too long, allow users to bulk delete their data, adjust the app’s recommendation algorithm, and allow parents to see and limit how much time their children spend on the platform. Instagram’s CEO Adam Mosseri is slated to testify before the Senate Commerce Committee later today.
- The Senate voted 68-31 on Tuesday to confirm Jessica Rosenworcel—acting chair of the Federal Communications Commission—to lead the regulatory body permanently. Gigi Sohn, President Biden’s second nominee to the FCC, faces a steeper path to confirmation.
- The White House formally withdrew Saule Omarova’s nomination to lead the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency on Tuesday as it became clear she did not have enough support to be confirmed in the Senate.
- In a reversal from last week, Mark Meadows—Donald Trump’s former chief of staff—told the January 6 Select Committee he will not cooperate any further with the body’s investigation. Reps. Bennie Thompson and Liz Cheney—the chair and vice chair of the committee—said yesterday Meadows’ decision leaves them no choice but to advance criminal contempt proceedings against the former representative.
- U.S. District Judge R. Stan Baker granted a preliminary injunction on Tuesday temporarily blocking enforcement of the Biden administration’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate for federal contractors across the country.
Biden Speaks With Putin Amid Rising Tension Over Ukraine
Last Friday, we provided an update on the unfolding crisis along Russia and Ukraine’s shared borders, with one question in mind: Will the Biden administration prove able to deter Moscow’s aggression?
In the days since Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, in Stockholm, the U.S. intelligence community leaked that it believes Russia is planning a “multi-front offensive” against Ukraine as soon as early 2022, and Ukrainian officials have reported the deployment of Russian snipers and tanks to the eastern frontlines in an alleged attempt to “provoke return fire” and justify an eventual offensive by the Kremlin.
Tuesday may have been the West’s last, best chance to dissuade Russian President Vladimir Putin from pursuing what Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov said would be a “really bloody massacre.”
In a two-hour video call with Putin on Tuesday morning, according to a White House readout, President Biden voiced “deep concerns” about Russia’s military buildup along the Ukrainian border, pledged to respond to any invasion with “strong economic and other measures,” and expressed his support for Ukraine’s “sovereignty and territorial integrity.”
National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan offered a bit more clarity on the contents of the call in a subsequent White House press briefing, but he stopped short of providing specific details regarding a potential U.S. response.
“We are laying out for the Russians in some detail the types of measures that we have in mind,” he told reporters when asked why the White House believes it will have more success deterring Putin than the Obama administration did in Crimea nearly a decade ago. “I will look you in the eye and tell you, as President Biden looked President Putin in the eye and told him today, that things we did not do in 2014 we are prepared to do now.”
Is It Time to Update the Electoral Count Act of 1887?
Congressional Democrats have spent much of the past year pushing—unsuccessfully, thus far—federal legislation that would massively overhaul states’ election administration nationwide. Although H.R. 1 was first introduced in 2019, lawmakers have since argued that former President Trump’s efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election render its passage all the more urgent.
“Republicans across the country continue to repeat Donald Trump’s ‘Big Lie,’” Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin said in March. “They continue to attack voting rights wherever they can—especially in communities of color. The Senate should take up and pass H.R. 1 ASAP. We must ensure equal access to the ballot box for every American.”
People can debate whether the voting laws enacted in red states this year are necessary—research tends to show voting restrictions generally have a marginal effect on turnout, if any—but Trump’s attempt to steal an election had nothing to do with voter suppression. If anything, the Republican nominee suppressed his own support by repeatedly railing against absentee ballots in the leadup to November.
Trump’s last-ditch plan to cling to power relied on persuading then-Vice President Mike Pence to “reject fraudulently chosen electors” from seven states when Congress convened to certify the election results on January 6. “The fact is that the Constitution assigns this power to the Vice President as the ultimate arbiter,” Trump lawyer John Eastman wrote in a memo describing the gambit.
In an effort to prevent something similar from happening again, the January 6 Select Committee has in recent days begun advocating for an update to the Electoral Count Act of 1887, upon which many of Eastman’s dubious assertions relied. “We think there are serious ambiguities and issues with the Electoral Count Act,” Rep. Adam Schiff told The Dispatch Tuesday. “Fortunately, nothing came to a head in the last presidential election. Should the next one be closer and it comes down to the application of an ambiguous provision, it could be a real constitutional crisis. We’re trying to avoid that.”
Worth Your Time
- We’re going to put just about anything Tim Alberta publishes in the Worth Your Time section, and his latest profile of Rep. Peter Meijer for The Atlantic is no exception. “Meijer described to me the psychological forces at work in his party, the reasons so many Republicans have refused to confront the tragedy of January 6 and the nature of the ongoing threat,” Alberta writes. “Some people are motivated by raw power, he said. Others have acted out of partisan spite, or ignorance, or warped perceptions of truth and lies. But the chief explanation, he said, is fear. People are afraid for their safety. They are afraid for their careers. Above all, they are afraid of fighting a losing battle in an empty foxhole. Meijer can’t blame them. ‘I just feel lonely,’ he told me, sighing with exasperation. Most of his colleagues, Meijer believes, want to be with him. They pat him on the back and whisper encouragement into his ear. They say they’re rooting for his side. But they don’t think his side can win. So they do nothing, convincing themselves that the problem will take care of itself, while guaranteeing that it will only get worse.”
- White House press secretary Jen Psaki earned some criticism on Monday when she snarkily dismissed a reporter’s question about the availability of rapid COVID-19 tests, and Reason’s Eric Boehm explains why her response was so vexing. “If the FDA cannot accelerate its evaluations to match what’s being done in Germany, Britain, and elsewhere, it should at least offer an emergency use authorization so tests approved by public health officials in other countries can be legally sold here,” he writes. “President Joe Biden should have asked the FDA to do that months ago. The availability of rapid, at-home testing could make a huge difference for Americans who are trying to navigate another holiday season during the pandemic. Even though I’m vaccinated and probably quite safe from COVID, I’d like to be able to take an at-home test before and after any visit with relatives or other social engagement this winter. But, as I learned after a visit to a local pharmacy before Thanksgiving, that means shelling out about $25 for a two-pack of tests.”
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
Also Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- In yesterday’s Uphill, Haley and Ryan provide an update on Congress’ efforts to raise the debt ceiling and continue diving into Democrats’ Build Back Better Act. On the docket this week: The legislation’s physical infrastructure components.
- American Enterprise Institute economist Michael Strain joined Jonah on yesterday’s Remnant for a conversation about supply chains, inflation, and labor shortages. Is it time for conservatives to embrace common good capitalism, or does zombie Reaganism still have plenty to offer? Which industries have been most changed by the pandemic? And have our lives actually improved since March 2020?
- David’s Tuesday French Press (🔒) focuses on David Perdue’s gubernatorial bid in Georgia, a defamation lawsuit against The Gateway Pundit, and what these events say about the fate of the American right. “Will [the GOP] recover from its Trumpist spasm of authoritarianism and corruption, or will it double down?” he writes. “Was January 6 the nadir of a low American age, or was it a preview of worse things to come?”
- On the site today, Paul Miller previews this week’s coming Summit of Democracy and warns that the West is suffering a crisis of confidence.
- Also, Behnam Ben Taleblu and Andrea Stricker warn that Joe Biden is running out of time to change his Iran policy, which, they argue, has served only to embolden the Islamic Republic.
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).
Subscribe to The Morning Dispatch
An essential daily news roundup, TMD includes a brief look at important stories of the day and original reporting and analysis from The Dispatch team, along with recommendations for deeper reading and some much-needed humor in these often fraught times.
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
|
33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
|
36.) AMERICAN THINKER
|
|
37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
|
40.) REUTERS
|
41.) NOQ REPORT
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
44.) WORLD NET DAILY
|
45.) MSNBC
December 8, 2021 THE LATEST A new poll suggests that “Latinx,” a gender neutral term to refer to people of Latin American Heritage, is deeply unpopular among Latinos, and those voters may be turned off by those who use it. The poll raises important questions about what it means for Democrats — including the president — to address a community using a term that just a small percentage of that community uses, Zeeshan Aleem writes. If Democrats’ use of the term is “not effective or is even a turn-off for some Latinos,” Aleem writes, “that may mean more Republicans in office — and more threats to trans rights and gender equality.”
Read Zeeshan Aleem’s full analysis on your Wednesday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Devin Nunes has reached his final form — and it’s all downhill from here. Read More The GOP is tastelessly using the Oxford High School shooting to own the libs. Read More ‘Latinx’ is an unpopular term — but Democrats shouldn’t panic. Read More GOP senators are doing their best to pretend to be outraged. Read More TOP VIDEOS LISTEN NOW Ayman Mohyeldin explores the story of Rosanne Boyland, a woman from his own hometown who became a foot soldier in one of the most dangerous movements in America and died at the Capitol on Jan. 6. In the premiere episode, Ayman heads back to Kennesaw, Georgia to help an old friend — Rosanne’s brother-in-law — figure out how Rosanne was radicalized so quickly. Listen now. MORE FROM MSNBC 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?” Hank Green has been on the leading edge of online content creation for more than a decade. He and his brother John created VidCon, the world’s largest video conference and have steadily built a wildly popular online community. In the newest episode, he joins Chris to discuss the growing popularity of platforms like TikTok, using the internet to do good and how monetization has evolved in an increasingly more competitive space. Listen now.
MSNBC Films presents “Paper & Glue,” from Oscar-winning producers Brian Grazer and Ron Howard. The award-winning documentary follows visionary French artist JR as his work transcends rules and borders, from a prison in California to a favela in Brazil.
Watch the world television premiere of “Paper & Glue,” Friday at 10 p.m. ET.
Follow MSNBC
Check out the MSNBC channel on Apple News
Download the NBC News Mobile App and watch MSNBC
|
46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
47.) ABC
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
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 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Pfizer just announced positive news about its booster and the omicron variant. But while the world has been focused on the new variant, an NBC News analysis of recent data shows its still the toxic combination of the delta variant and the unvaccinated driving the surge of Covid hospitalizations in the U.S.
Here’s what we’re watching this Wednesday morning. Covid-19 hospitalizations are once again rising in the United States — and it’s not omicron driving the surge, but rather the highly contagious delta variant.
Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Pennsylvania, New York and Illinois accounted for the majority of the increase in patients hospitalized with Covid, according to an NBC News analysis of U.S. Department of Health and Human Services data.
While all eyes have been on the new omicron variant, delta is still a threat, as “over 99 percent of sequenced cases in the United States continue to be from” that strain, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said Tuesday at a White House Covid-19 Response Team briefing.
And it’s mostly the unvaccinated who are filling up the hospital beds.
In Michigan, which has the highest share of new hospitalizations, unvaccinated people make up 87 percent of Covid patients who are in an intensive care unit in the state, according to the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services.
The seemingly never-ending pandemic is taking its toll on hospital staff.
“We’ve been doing this for so long,” said Dr. Matthew Sims, a physician and director of infectious disease research at Beaumont Health, the Michigan’s largest health care system. “It does get tiring to the nurses, the doctors, everybody when we see this huge number of patients that are all coming in that are not vaccinated.”
More on Covid-19
Wednesday’s Top Stories
President Joe Biden told Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday that the U.S. would pursue “strong economic measures” should Russia invade Ukraine. The House also approved the massive defense authorization bill Tuesday that includes $300 million in military support for Ukraine. “It really shows how polarizing and toxic the political environment has become when an elected official is getting a threat over infrastructure — one of the things that everybody loves,” said Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y.. Her office has been inundated with angry phone calls since she voted for the roughly $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure package last month. Biden’s move is being criticized as a half-measure, from both sides of the partisan divide, illustrating the challenge he faces at home as he tries to calibrate effective responses to China’s rise as a global power. Meantime, Australia announced it will join the U.S. in the diplomatic boycott of the games. Two sets of parents are suing Maine over its policy of making tuition money available in areas that don’t have public high schools but not for schools that promote sectarian beliefs. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
Explosions, noise and beach closings have disrupted the peace in Boca Chica, Texas, and harmed wildlife, residents and environmentalists say One Fun Thing
Singer Olivia Rodrigo returned to the DMV this week — not to get her driver’s license, but to perform her famous song about it.
The singer and “High School Musical: The Musical: The Series” star performed songs from her album “Sour” at the Glendale DMV in California for a special edition of NPR’s “Tiny Desk” series, which was uploaded Tuesday.
Read the full story 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
50.) CBS
51.) REASON
52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
54.) TOWNHALL
|
||
FACEBOOK TWITTER |
ADVERTISEMENT | ||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions You can unsubscribe by clicking here. Or Send postal mail to: * Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers. |
55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
|
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
The chips are falling, and they are coming to our side and that’s why they’re in meltdown.
|
🚨RED ALERT: Trump Wins Major Wisconsin Election Case Battle…
|
TOP STORIES:
-
‘It’s All Collapsing’: Bannon Drops Bombshell About 2020
-
MARK MEADOWS GOES ALL IN WITH BANNON…
- DOJ Doubling Down On Steve Bannon…
-
Rep. Greene Outrageously Fined $70,000 By Nancy Pelosi
- Judge Just Blocked Joe Biden In Massive Power Move
-
‘Dems Make First Major Move To Hijack The Supreme Court…
-
Rittenhouse Gets Ultimate Revenge on “Woke Lebron”
- VIDEO: Irate Alec Baldwin Charges at Reporter After Being Caught…
- Devin Nunes, Donald Trump Fire the First Shot At Big Tech
- Cuomo Just Plotted His Sick Revenge Against CNN
- Rep. Devin Nunes Retiring After Major Announcement From Trump
-
Trump Wins Major Wisconsin Election Case Battle…
-
Kamala Harris Scrambling… Picture Goes Viral
|
IN DEPTH:
|
- Biden’s Dollar Store Debacle 14 mins ago
- Democrat Oregon Gov. Brown Spotted Maskless… 1 hour ago
- Senate Democrats push to close Guantanamo Bay 1 hour ago
- Jussie Smollett blasts prosecutor for using the N-word… 1 hour ago
- Rittenhouse: ‘I’ll Be There In The Spring!’ 2 hours ago
- Women to Register for the Draft… Tossed 2 hours ago
- New York City may allow noncitizens to vote 1 hour ago
- Kremlin: No breakthroughs expected at Biden-Putin talk 1 hour ago
-
Meadows signals Trump 2024 run 1 hour ago
- Changes ahead for Space Force… 2 hours ago
- Missile contract with NATO allies at risk… 2 hours ago
- Former Trump Officials Hit Roadblock … 2 hours ago
- Biden misses deadline to disclose Afghan airlift details 2 hours ago
- Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit has died 2 hours ago
- Heisman Trophy finalists revealed… 2 hours ago
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar rips LeBron James… 2 hours ago
- Mark Meadows will cease cooperation with Jan. 6 committee 2 hours ago
- Trump’s new media platform and Rumble have distribution deal 2 hours ago
- Psaki annoyed Biden admin is forced to restart ‘Remain in Mexico’… 2 hours ago
- Biden’s Secret Service arrests open borders immigration activists… 2 hours ago
- Spider-Man Star To Play Fred Astaire In Upcoming Biopic 2 hours ago
- Former D.C. National Guard official says generals lied to Congress… 2 hours ago
- LAPD Detective Says Los Angeles Is Unsafe for Tourists… 2 hours ago
- Putin to Biden: Finlandize Ukraine, or We Will… 2 hours ago
- New York Moves to Invalidate American Citizenship 2 hours ago
- More States Exit National School Board Association… 2 hours ago
- Aborting Roe Will Not Save the Dems in 2022 3 hours ago
- CNN Managed to Finally Do Right in Firing Chris Cuomo and Still Managed to Get So Much Wrong 3 hours ago
- Ireland Allows Thousands of Illegal Migrants to Stay Permanently in Country 3 hours ago
- White House Confirms U.S. Will Play China’s Genocide Olympics 3 hours ago
- WATCH: Jen Psaki Refuses to Revise Claim Hunter Biden Laptop ‘Russian Disinformation’ 3 hours ago
- Omar Confident Pelosi Will Take ‘Decisive Action’ Against Boebert… 3 hours ago
- “Buzzfeed” Drops 11% in First Day of Trading 3 hours ago
- Tesla Shares Slide After SEC Probe… 3 hours ago
- US debt limit could be reached by Dec. 21… 3 hours ago
- Man wins lottery twice… 3 hours ago
- 47k More People Died of This Disease in 2020 Due to Lockdowns 3 hours ago
- Economists Warn Inflation Will Remain High For 3 Years… 3 hours ago
- Man who claims he invented Bitcoin wins trial… 3 hours ago
- Jussie Smollett testifies to receiving text from CNN’s Don Lemon… 3 hours ago
- US announces diplomatic boycott of China 2022 Olympics… 3 hours ago
- Chris Cuomo prepping to sue CNN… 3 hours ago
- Elon calls for Congress to throw out Biden’s entire Build Back Better bill…. 3 hours ago
- Lessons From a Day of Infamy 11 hours ago
- REPORT: Research Sponsored by COVID-19 Vaccine Makers Undermines Mandates 20 hours ago
- New York Moves to Invalidate American Citizenship 21 hours ago
|
🚨RED ALERT: Trump Wins Major Wisconsin Election Case Battle…
|
TOP STORIES:
-
‘It’s All Collapsing’: Bannon Drops Bombshell About 2020 Election
-
‘Corrupt Piece of Sh*t’: Rittenhouse Prosecutor Gets Bad News
-
Liz Cheney Just Got Worst News Of Her Career After Backstabbing Trump
-
Pelosi’s Biased Commission Just Blew Up In Her Face Big Time
- DOJ Doubling Down On Steve Bannon…
- Rep. Greene Outrageously Fined $70,000 By Nancy Pelosi
- Judge Just Blocked Joe Biden In Massive Power Move
- ‘Dems Make First Major Move To Hijack The Supreme Court…
-
Rittenhouse Gets Ultimate Revenge on “Woke Lebron”
- VIDEO: Irate Alec Baldwin Charges at Reporter After Being Caught…
- Devin Nunes, Donald Trump Fire the First Shot At Big Tech
- Cuomo Just Plotted His Sick Revenge Against CNN
- Rep. Devin Nunes Retiring After Major Announcement From Trump
-
Trump Wins Major Wisconsin Election Case Battle…
-
Kamala Harris Scrambling… Picture Goes Viral
|
IN DEPTH:
|
- Biden Threatens Putin… He’s Real Scared…
- Karma Finally Catches Up With Infamous BLM Protester
- Biden’s Dollar Store Debacle 14 mins ago
- Democrat Oregon Gov. Brown Spotted Maskless… 1 hour ago
- Senate Democrats push to close Guantanamo Bay 1 hour ago
- Jussie Smollett blasts prosecutor for using the N-word… 1 hour ago
- Rittenhouse: ‘I’ll Be There In The Spring!’ 2 hours ago
- Women to Register for the Draft… Tossed 2 hours ago
- New York City may allow noncitizens to vote 1 hour ago
- Kremlin: No breakthroughs expected at Biden-Putin talk 1 hour ago
-
Meadows signals Trump 2024 run 1 hour ago
- Changes ahead for Space Force… 2 hours ago
- Missile contract with NATO allies at risk… 2 hours ago
- Former Trump Officials Hit Roadblock … 2 hours ago
- Biden misses deadline to disclose Afghan airlift details 2 hours ago
- Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit has died 2 hours ago
- Heisman Trophy finalists revealed… 2 hours ago
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar rips LeBron James… 2 hours ago
- Mark Meadows will cease cooperation with Jan. 6 committee 2 hours ago
- Trump’s new media platform and Rumble have distribution deal 2 hours ago
- Psaki annoyed Biden admin is forced to restart ‘Remain in Mexico’… 2 hours ago
- Biden’s Secret Service arrests open borders immigration activists… 2 hours ago
- Spider-Man Star To Play Fred Astaire In Upcoming Biopic 2 hours ago
- Former D.C. National Guard official says generals lied to Congress… 2 hours ago
- LAPD Detective Says Los Angeles Is Unsafe for Tourists… 2 hours ago
- Putin to Biden: Finlandize Ukraine, or We Will… 2 hours ago
- New York Moves to Invalidate American Citizenship 2 hours ago
- More States Exit National School Board Association… 2 hours ago
- Aborting Roe Will Not Save the Dems in 2022 3 hours ago
- CNN Managed to Finally Do Right in Firing Chris Cuomo and Still Managed to Get So Much Wrong 3 hours ago
- Ireland Allows Thousands of Illegal Migrants to Stay Permanently in Country 3 hours ago
- White House Confirms U.S. Will Play China’s Genocide Olympics 3 hours ago
- WATCH: Jen Psaki Refuses to Revise Claim Hunter Biden Laptop ‘Russian Disinformation’ 3 hours ago
- Omar Confident Pelosi Will Take ‘Decisive Action’ Against Boebert… 3 hours ago
- “Buzzfeed” Drops 11% in First Day of Trading 3 hours ago
- Tesla Shares Slide After SEC Probe… 3 hours ago
- US debt limit could be reached by Dec. 21… 3 hours ago
- Man wins lottery twice… 3 hours ago
- 47k More People Died of This Disease in 2020 Due to Lockdowns 3 hours ago
- Economists Warn Inflation Will Remain High For 3 Years… 3 hours ago
- Man who claims he invented Bitcoin wins trial… 3 hours ago
- Jussie Smollett testifies to receiving text from CNN’s Don Lemon… 3 hours ago
- US announces diplomatic boycott of China 2022 Olympics… 3 hours ago
- Chris Cuomo prepping to sue CNN… 3 hours ago
- Elon calls for Congress to throw out Biden’s entire Build Back Better bill…. 3 hours ago
- Lessons From a Day of Infamy 11 hours ago
- REPORT: Research Sponsored by COVID-19 Vaccine Makers Undermines Mandates 20 hours ago
- New York Moves to Invalidate American Citizenship 21 hours ago
|
You signed up for the Populist Press newsletter at www.Populist.Press We are the #1 Drudge Alternative. Visit our homepage for more incredible news!
|
REPLY TO THIS EMAIL IF YOU WISH TO BE ADDED TO THE LESS FREQUENT LIST.
Populist Press
7940 Front Beach Rd.
Panama City Beach, FL. 32407
74.) THE POST MILLENNIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Did a friend forward this? Subscribe here. Welcome to the Wednesday edition of the Internet Insider, where we tell you what you should be watching this week. TODAY:
Q&A ‘Flee’s director on bringing his friend’s story to life Flee, the latest documentary by Danish director Jonas Poher Rasmussen, is an extraordinary film. Centered on Rasmussen’s friend Amin (a pseudonym) as he’s about to make several life changes, Flee is a clear-eyed view into a refugee’s story about how he fled Afghanistan as a boy and the sacrifices his family made in the years it took Amin to arrive in Denmark.
It’s also Amin’s journey of self-acceptance as a gay man and his struggles to find a sense of home decades after living through the trauma of being displaced. The film’s animation allowed Rasmussen and his team to visualize parts of Amin’s story in which no footage exists and protect Amin’s identity. The story highlights the casual cruelty that refugees faced on a daily basis as well as some of the lighter moments that occurred during that time.
I sat down with Rasmussen a couple of months ago to learn more about what went into bringing Amin’s story to life, voice casting an animated documentary, and the limitless ceiling of animation. Flee is now out in limited release.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Daily Dot: You’ve already mentioned some of the practical reasons for telling Amin’s story in animation in previous interviews. What else about the medium appealed to you?
Jonas Poher Rasmussen: I always loved animation, and animation, to me, is kind of magical and everything is possible. If you wanted to go to the moon, you could do that. It’s really a story about memory and trauma as well that we thought animation could be more expressive. Somehow, it felt more honest because it is Amir thinking back and I would never be able to recreate exactly what happened. Because we could be more expressive, it felt more honest somehow.
What kind of challenges, technically speaking, did you come across when making Flee that you didn’t expect?
It was quite a steep learning curve because I’d never done animation before. So in the beginning, we did some first tests and then I was like, ‘But can we change this?’ They’re like, ‘No. We’re done with the animation, so it’s too late now.’ You need to be really, really precise on what you want and how it should look like from the very beginning.
It’s somewhat opposite of the process of doing live-action documentary and fiction because normally, you shoot and then you go into the editing room and then you kind of become a slave of the material you brought home.
So in the editing room, we had quite a bit of flexibility and freedom to really be precise in having the exact framing we wanted and having the exact shots we wanted. That was really an amazing experience because it gave so much freedom in the editing room.
In regards to the present-day scenes, how much were you able to set up and capture that? Were those scenes photorealistic?
We used real footage as a reference for the visual style but also for how there’s a difference in how we treat the camera when Amir is talking about his past and in these present-day scenes where it’s more kind of me behind the camera. There are jump-cuts and all of these things in the present-day sequences. And that was very deliberate because we wanted it to feel authentic.
You get a sense of that with the very beginning of Flee when you’re trying to frame and set up the first interview with Amin, which you see in a lot of other documentaries. And it lets people know that Flee is a documentary if they went in without that knowledge.
We wanted that from the very beginning because it was important that people understood that Amin is a real person behind the animation.
The Q&A continues below. SPONSORED One asset that builds generational wealth is real estate, but that privilege is usually reserved for a select few—until now. reAlpha uses disruptive technology to level the playing field and unravel the high barriers of entry into real estate investing. Considered the Robinhood of Airbnb, reAlpha gives ordinary people the ability to gain fractional ownership in short-term rental properties and earn passive income. They even do free stays at your property holdings. (It’s like a timeshare, only not terrible in every way.) Learn how to become a shareholder of reAlpha today! Animated documentaries aren’t completely unheard of; Waltz with Bashir is a famous one in the genre. Were there any documentaries or films you looked toward to help you tell this story responsibly?
Waltz with Bashir is the big kind of crowned jewel in animated documentary, and I, of course, looked at that one. That also deals with trauma somewhat the same way as Flee does. Of course, Persepolis is a documentary as well, but that’s more a cartoon, and it’s acted out.
But there are these Swedish short films. One’s called Hidden and is about these legal immigrants in Sweden who hide themselves, and it’s just this kid talking about all these things he can’t do. So I could see there that you could use animation to create anonymity.
But otherwise, for the visual style of the film, it was really actually looking more toward different visual artists: Edward Hopper, Ricky Metzger. We had a bunch of short-animated films as reference for the more graphical sequences in the film.
Amin’s story in Flee covers several decades and features dozens of speaking parts, including Amin at several different ages. How do you go about casting something like this?
It was difficult because we don’t have a lot of Afghan actors in Denmark who speak both Danish and Dari. So it was really about going into the Afghan communities in Denmark and finding people who would be willing to act. A lot of these people had similar stories to Amir’s and really felt a commitment to tell the story.
Because it’s a documentary, I actually think it was helpful that there weren’t schooled actors, that they kind of used their own experiences and their own voice in the film.
When Flee first premiered at Sundance, it connected with audiences, and in the months since, it’s resonated even more. What do you hope changes about how we talk about refugees or how the refugee crisis is covered?
I really hope that this film will give a human face on refugees because there are more than 80 million people who are refugees right now. Hopefully, people will see—this is not a mass of 80 million people; it’s 80 million individuals who all have different stories.
How did you balance the different tones—it’s a refugee story but it’s also about Amin’s journey toward self-acceptance as a gay man—throughout the film?
I think [the different tones] very much come from the friendship side of it because the way we talk to each other, there’s a certain tone. Of course, we’re serious, but we’re also friends, and we can be silly. But also because he was fleeing for five years, and it was not all horrible, you know? He also had tender moments with his family; he also fell in love with a young guy in the back of a truck. He had a feeling of security pushing forward. I think these things that make us relate to a person. I think there’s something about when you’re with a character in a film: If you have a moment where you can laugh with them, it kind of opens everything up because all of a sudden, you’re attached in another way.
—Michelle Jaworski, staff writer
DAILY DOT PICKS
NOW STREAMING ‘A Castle for Christmas’ doesn’t stray far from the holiday movie we know A Castle for Christmas follows a formula that has become the model for streaming holiday movies. A successful woman in New York City (in this case, Brooke Shields, playing a successful novelist) travels to a smaller town (in this case, it’s a village in Scotland where her grandfather lived). The inhabitants teach her about community and embracing a slower lifestyle. They also teach her how to knit and yarn bomb—one of the best parts of the movie. Inevitably, she falls for the curmudgeonly owner of an old castle (The Princess Bride’s Cary Elwes), and the two of them engage in incredibly cute holiday activities.
Does it work? Sometimes. The big appeal of A Castle for Christmas is that it adds a castle to the tried-but-true holiday movie plot, popularized on the Hallmark Channel. A lot of the movie is very silly and unbelievable, like fans protesting because Shields’ novelist kills a fictional main character in her latest book. But it’s also a cozy movie, one that is best paired with a hot beverage and a blanket. The romance feels forced at times, and the character development is minimal. But the movie does feature maybe the most beautiful knit cardigan I have ever seen. Apparently, Shields had some experience knitting before she joined the movie and enjoyed that aspect of it. I’m choosing to see A Castle for Christmas as a knitting movie over a generic rom-com.
—Tiffany Kelly, culture editor
Now Playing: 🎶 “Burning Down the House” by Talking Heads 🎶 How did you like this newsletter? Click an icon below to give us a rating!
Copyright © 2021 The Daily Dot, All rights reserved.
Don’t want to hear from us anymore?
Questions? Feedback? Contact us at info@dailydot.com.
To view in your browser, click here .
3112 Windsor Road, Ste. A-391, Austin, TX 78703 |
77.) HEADLINE USA
78.) NATURAL NEWS
|
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Wednesday 12.08.21 One unexpected victim of the climate crisis? Golf courses, which experts say are in danger of turning into muddy swamps as Earth’s weather patterns become wilder. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell commenting yesterday on negotiations to raise the debt ceiling. Congress
Two key pieces of legislation passed the House late yesterday. Democrats, joined by lone GOP Rep. Adam Kinzinger, voted to pass a new debt ceiling plan to raise the country’s borrowing limit and avoid a disastrous default later this month. It will now be taken up by the Senate, where Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell have reached a deal to let Democrats raise the ceiling on their votes alone — a plan McConnell backs because it absolves the GOP of any responsibility for the critical vote. The annual National Defense Authorization Act also made it through the House with strong bipartisan support. The bill sets the policy agenda and authorizes nearly $770 billion in funding for the Department of Defense. This year’s version also changes the way sexual harassment and assault is handled in the military, and authorizes millions to assist with defenses in Ukraine.
Germany
Olaf Scholz has been voted in as Germany’s new chancellor, ending Angela Merkel’s 16 years at the helm. This was an expected victory for the 63-year-old leader of the Social Democratic Party. The SPD narrowly prevailed in September’s federal elections, and have been engaged in negotiations ever since. Even though Scholz and Merkel are from opposing parties, he is seen as a like-minded successor in many ways. He served as vice-chancellor and finance minister in Merkel’s grand coalition government, a powerful position in German national politics, and has positioned himself as a safe and pragmatic leader with moderate and centrist political views. Scholz will be inheriting the difficult job of steering Germany through a time of diplomatic uncertainty in the European Union, and must do so without the hard-won international reputation of his predecessor. Capitol riot
Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows will no longer cooperate with the House select committee investigating the January 6 insurrection. A letter from his attorney says Meadows was ready to voluntarily appear for a deposition, but “actions by the Select Committee have made such an appearance untenable.” The committee has formally subpoenaed the phone records of more than 100 people, including Meadows and many other Trump officials and associates. The records do not include the content of the calls, but rather details about who called or texted whom, when, and for how long. Meadows’ reversal means he is once again in danger of being held in contempt of Congress and could face jail time — a punishment the committee says they are not afraid to pursue. Coronavirus
The Omicron coronavirus variant partly evades the protection offered by the Pfizer vaccine, according to researchers in South Africa. This is the first experiment to directly examine how Omicron may behave in vaccinated people. The research also shows people who were infected and later vaccinated seem to have more protection, and boosters are also likely to be effective. Believe it or not, researchers say this is good news. They were concerned the variant would fully escape the vaccine’s protection, which it doesn’t. Meanwhile, a convention may give the US its first look at how Omicron spreads. The CDC has joined investigations into the aftermath of the Anime NYC 2021 event held last month, where about 53,000 were in attendance. Many have since reported contracting the virus. Same-sex marriage
Chile’s Congress has voted to approve a bill legalizing same-sex marriage. The bill was first introduced by former President Michelle Bachelet, but was revived after current President Sebastian Piñera — a right-wing, conservative politician — said earlier this year that he supported marriage equality. “In this way, all people without distinguishing by sexual orientation, will be able to live love and form a family with all the protection and dignity that they need and deserve,” he said in June. When he signs the bill, Chile will join Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Uruguay and parts of Mexico in the group of Latin American countries that have legalized same-sex marriage. Across the world, Tokyo’s Metropolitan government will start a system that effectively allows same-sex marriage in Japan’s capital starting next year. The only place in Asia to legalize same-sex marriage is Taiwan. Paid Partner Content SimpliSafe Protects You Order SimpliSafe today and get 50% off, plus a free SimpliCam and 10% off Interactive. Protect your home & family with award-winning home security this holiday season.
$161M to Conquer Retirement This tiny startup raised $161M to help people retire more comfortably. With 110 million Americans over age 50, it’s no wonder people are flocking to its tool. Learn more.
Insanely High Paying Cash Back Card Is Here Score an insanely easy $200 bonus offer after spending $500 in the first 3 months with this cashback card. That’s like getting 40% cashback on your next $500 in spend! People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Here’s what people Googled in 2021
Pete Davidson and Machine Gun Kelly hit the nail salon together
BTS members launch personal Instagram accounts
These are the words we mispronounced the most this year
These are the best bars in the world for 2021 $168,700 That’s the value of a trove of sapphires and emeralds a climber found while scaling Mont Blanc in France. After years of trying to locate the original owner, authorities have allowed the climber to keep half of the precious gems, amounting to about $84,000. No, money will not ever fix what that woman has done to me.
Carolyn, one of the women who has testified at the trial of Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime companion of Jeffery Epstein. Carolyn said she was just 14 years old when she began to go to Jeffrey Epstein’s home in Palm Beach, Florida, and that Maxwell facilitated many of those encounters. Brought to you by CNN Underscored Do you have one of the 11 best credit cards of December? If it’s been at least three years since you put a credit card in your purse or wallet, now’s the time to consider your options and see if a new credit card might serve you better. Here are the best cards to check out in December. Keeping tradition alive Sponsor Content by Quince The $50 Cashmere Sweater Yep, you read that right. 100% Grade A cashmere. 1,500+ 5-star reviews. 10 colors. And, just $50. Or 50-70% less than other brands. Everyone
5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
No longer want to receive this newsletter? Unsubscribe. Interested in more? See all of our newsletters.
Like what you see? Don’t like what you see? Let us know. We’re all about self improvement. Did a friend forward you this newsletter? Sign up here.
Create CNN Account | Listen to CNN Audio | Download the CNN App
® © 2021 Cable News Network, Inc. A WarnerMedia Company. All Rights Reserved. One CNN Center Atlanta, GA 30303
|
83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- Desperately Seeking White Supremacists
- Bob Dole, then and now
- Kamala, On the Job!
- Sotomayor, abortion, and “demosprudence”
- On the Eastman subpoena
Desperately Seeking White Supremacists
Posted: 07 Dec 2021 05:40 PM PST (John Hinderaker)I started to write about this story a couple of days ago, but stopped because I wasn’t sure what to make of it. I’m still not sure, but here goes anyway, for what it is worth. On Saturday afternoon there was a demonstration in Washington by a small group of identically clad and masked men, many of them carrying American flags. They reportedly were members of a group called the Patriot Front, which is said to be white supremacist:
Everything about this scene is weird: the identical clothes, the masks, the plastic shields, the greaves. I don’t know; maybe white supremacists actually dress and act like this. I can’t say, as I’ve never met one. Twitter conservatives promptly questioned whether the whole thing was staged by the FBI. For example:
Things then started to get even stranger. Stephen Green writes:
Links omitted in what follows:
Most recently, the Washington Post headlines that “experts say” a “white supremacist march in D.C. was pushed by a fake Twitter account.” The article is behind a paywall, so I don’t know what it says. I have no idea what to make of this. Was the D.C. rally, minimal as it was, a legitimate product of the Patriot Front? To what extent does such an organization actually exist, independent of federal infiltrators? How many of those who participated in Saturday’s demonstration were FBI agents? None? Some? Most? All? Why did this tiny demonstration get so much publicity when, for example, the annual March For Life draws hundreds of thousands of participants and gets little or no press coverage? What is the story with the apparently fictitious “Sheryl Lewellen”? Was she created by the Patriot Front? Or by the FBI? “She” apparently spread the word about the rally by tagging journalists. How did “she” know that journalists would jump on a report of a white supremacist rally at the Lincoln Memorial? Heh. Just kidding about that last one. Everyone–even a non-existent AI construct–knows that journalists are desperate for news of white supremacists, the demand for which vastly exceeds the supply. White supremacists, whatever that term may mean, seem oddly reticent compared with, say, Black Lives Matter and Antifa rioters, who make their presence known by burning down large sections of major cities. |
Bob Dole, then and now
Posted: 07 Dec 2021 11:35 AM PST (Paul Mirengoff)I found it amusing to read the nostalgia in the reporting on Bob Dole’s death. Dole deserved the praise he received from the mainstream media. He was an important member of the Senate for decades — one of that body’s leading figures of the last half of the 20th century. What amused me was the presentation of Dole as bridge-builder, friend of Democrats and Republicans alike, and reminder of the good old days when the parties cooperated and the Senate got things done. Dole was all of these things to a degree, but that’s not how the mainstream media usually portrayed him when he mattered. Back then, Dole was portrayed as a nasty piece of work, a hatchet man with an acerbic wit. In 1976, when he ran for vice president, the line on Dole was that Gerald Ford selected him because of his ability to sling mud at Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale. President Ford would take the high road while Dole would ridicule and demean the opposition. If I recall correctly, Dole was sometimes compared to Richard Nixon, to whom he bore a slight physical resemblance. To the media, Nixon was, of course, the symbol of the politics of negativity, division, and hate. It was also said of Dole that he never got over the resentment of having lost the use of an arm while fighting in World War II. This was offered as a partial explanation for his alleged dark side. Dole did not shed this mainstream media caricature until his public life was essentially over. In the 1990s, the MSM used the frustration Dole showed during his ill-fated 1988 campaign against George H.W. Bush to reinforce the image. There was nothing warm, fuzzy, or the least bit sympathetic about the way the MSM portrayed Dole when he ran against Bill Clinton in 1996. It’s true that, by then, the media had a new weapon — Dole’s age (he was 73 years old, hardly old by today’s standard of presidential candidate age). Dole helped administer that dagger by describing himself as a “bridge to the past” in his acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention. But the media didn’t abandon the “prince of darkness” narrative. It portrayed Dole as deeply divisive. There was little if any praise that I recall of his Senate skills or his ability to work across party lines. I agree with much of what the mainstream media now says about Dole. His style of politics and leadership differs significantly from the current style. But then, when Dole was in the Senate, Democratic presidents (Carter and Clinton) weren’t trying radically to transform America. Nor were large numbers of Senate Dems clamoring to abolish the legislative filibuster and pack the Supreme Court. If Dole were Senate Minority Leader today, I suspect his approach would be basically the same as Mitch McConnell’s. Maybe McConnell will cease to be treated as an ogre when he dies. Maybe not. My point, though, is the mainstream media’s serial demonization of Republicans who stand in the way of its liberal agenda. When Ronald Reagan had power, he was a right-wing zealot and menace to world peace. When George W. Bush had power, he was the evil stooge of the even more evil Dick Cheney. When it looked like Mitt Romney might get power, he was a callous, out-of-touch serial destroyer of jobs and wrecker of lives. Even Dwight Eisenhower was a victim of media defamation. The media couldn’t demonize Ike because he was the hero of World War II. So instead, it portrayed him as a bumbler — a rube. Eisenhower was anything but, as virtually everyone now agrees, but the image suited the liberal media’s purposes. To the mainstream media, it seems that the only good Republican is a dead Republican.– or at least a Republican without power and the chance of obtaining it. |
Kamala, On the Job!
Posted: 07 Dec 2021 10:47 AM PST (Steven Hayward)Amidst the terrible beating Vice President Kamala Harris is taking in the media right now, the Democratic National Committee wants you to know that she’s doing very important work on crucial issues at the top of the public’s mind. Or so declares this press release from the DNC today:
Significant that this comes from the DNC and not the White House. Also: Harris “continues” to lead on this issue?? She had this job all along, and we’re just now hearing about it? You can hear Biden now: “Heck of a job, Kamala!” It’s as if the George H.W. Bush Administration had put out a note after Dan Quayle’s “potatoe” gaffe that Quayle was being put in charge of the National Spelling Bee. |
Sotomayor, abortion, and “demosprudence”
Posted: 07 Dec 2021 09:16 AM PST (Paul Mirengoff)This opinion piece in the Washington Post carries the title, “Sotomayor saw she couldn’t sway her colleagues. So she talked to us instead.” The article is by law professor Melissa Murray who clerked for Sotomayor at the appeals court level. I don’t know whether either proposition in the title is accurate, but I can vouch for the second and third words of the second sentence. Sotomayor talked. She talked and talked. She talked when counsel for the state of Mississippi tried to answer her questions. Counsel was lucky if he could get ten words out without Sotomayor interrupting him. Sotomayor’s approach stood in marked contrast to the other eight Justices. Seven of them seemed (or at least pretended to be) interested in what the lawyers for both sides had to say. They were polite, though sometimes pointed. If I recall correctly, Justice Gorsuch even thanked counsel for answers, describing some of them as helpful. Justice Breyer lectured at length, mostly about what Casey v. Planned Parenthood said about stare decisis. He seemed to be trying to sway a few of his less liberal colleagues. Breyer was tedious, but at least he didn’t repeatedly interrupt counsel. With all that’s at stake in Dobbs, it’s not surprising that Sotomayor was amped up. However, her performance wasn’t abnormal for her. That, at least, is my impression based on the handful of Supreme Court oral arguments I listen to from start to finish each year. It seems to me that Sotomayor often tries to dominate the questioning, which is unfortunate because she’s the Justice I least want to hear from. Not because she’s a leftist. Elana Kagan is too, but I always enjoy her questioning. Kagan strikes me as one of the Court’s leading thinkers. Sotomayor comes across as its weakest. She’s not a hack — far from it — but she suffers by comparison to her colleagues. Let’s return, though, to the thesis that Sotomayor was “talking to us.” Professor Murray says, “Sotomayor was suggesting that the court need not have the last word on abortion.” I assume Murray wrote those words without intending irony. But the view that the Supreme Court not have the last word on abortion comes close to what the state of Mississippi was arguing — and to the position Justice Kavanaugh appeared to take in the portion of the argument that should worry Sotomayor, Murray, et al. the most. Murray continues:
Much of this passage comes very close to the position the conservative legal movement has taken on abortion jurisprudence for decades. Let the people, not nine judges, decide when, if ever, it’s lawful to terminate a pregnancy with an abortion. As Justice Kavanaugh pointedly asked:
Why, indeed? Here’s to “demosprudence.” |
On the Eastman subpoena
Posted: 07 Dec 2021 06:16 AM PST (Scott Johnson)The House of Representatives Select Jan. 6 Committee has undertaken to subpoena the communications of private citizens and others in the scope of its investigation. In a November 8 press release, the committee announced that it sought to sweep up the records of six named individuals, including attorney John Eastman. Eastman rendered legal advice to Trump on the applicable constitutional provisions and spoke at the January 6 rally. They are the subject of the essays I flagged in “CRB: The Eastman memos.” Last night Tucker Carlson interviewed Eastman about the committee’s efforts to sweep up his communications. I have posted the video below. The committee exercises its subpoena power subject to enforcement by criminal contempt. Usually that’s not much of a threat, but the Biden/Garland Justice Department is on board with the House committee. Eastman’s comments raise a question regarding the lawful scope of Congress’s subpoena power in this matter. On this point, I have no knowledge. Looking around online, however, I found Elizabeth Goitein’s September 22 column specifically anticipating and addressing the legal issues as to January 6 protesters. Goitein’s analysis was originally posted here at Just Security and subsequently reposted by here the Brennan Center for Justice. I am unable to evaluate Goitein’s analysis, but it is clearly written in good faith from the perspective of a professed supporter of the committee’s investigation. Goitein expresses serious doubts about this aspect of the project. She concludes:
I should add that Goitein’s analysis may differ as to the individuals identified in the November 8 and other press releases, including Eastman. In any case, I found Goitein’s analysis interesting, useful, and troubling.
|
You are subscribed to email updates from Power LinePower Line. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. |
Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
|
92.) THE DAILY BEAST
Advertisement
When all hell breaks loose, we keep a grip on reality.
Support our newsroom by becoming a member.
Fever Dreams A podcast covering twisted tales of the new American right.
By Zachary Petrizzo, Lachlan Cartwright
© Copyright 2021 The Daily Beast Company LLC If you are on a mobile device or cannot view the images in this message, click here to view this email in your browser. To ensure delivery of these emails, please add emails@thedailybeast.com to your address book. If you no longer wish to receive these emails, or think you have received this message in error, you can safely unsubscribe. |
93.) JUST THE NEWS
|
94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
|
96.) NOT THE BEE
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
99.) MARK LEVIN
December 7, 2021
On Tuesday’s Mark Levin Show, the attack on Pearl Harbor sparked America’s entrance into World War II. Many enlisted to serve their country, some were relatives of this program. The sacrifice and patriotism by these men were great, nothing like the men of our current administration. Lamentably, the writing is on the wall for a war with China which threatens many countries. Russia is expanding aggressively and will likely invade Ukraine again. Iran is months away from having a nuclear weapon and is prepared to go to war. President Biden is not prepared for the coming conflict. Then, former Ambassador and National Security Advisor Ric Grenell calls in to share how the Reagan Library’s board has dramatically changed to eliminate Reaganites and Trump supporters. Grenell added that the rise of China has been steady as they infiltrated the power structure of many institutions. The U.S must refrain from doing business with the CCP. Later, the philosophy of Americanism embraces things that are proven to have worked for the betterment of society. This was the difference between Trump and the Democrats, it was peace and common sense versus uncertainty and a radical leftist ideology. Afterward, Former White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany calls in to discuss her new book “For Such a Time as This: My Faith Journey through the White House and Beyond.”
McEnany highlights her time in the Trump White House and how her faith guided her in through the lies and vitriol of the media.
THIS IS FROM:
C-SPAN
Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Address to Congress, December 8, 1941
American Rhetoric
Patton Speech (1970)
MSNBC
Trump says a bit too much about James Comey’s FBI firing (again)
NBC News
Congress hatches novel plan to lift debt ceiling with only Democratic votes
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Kat Wade
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
|
102.) CNS
103.) RELIABLE NEWS
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
|
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||
|
|||||
106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) BECKER NEWS
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
|
|
||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||
|
||||||||||||||
|
|||||
109.) STARS & STRIPES
110.) RIGHT & FREE
|
111.) UNITED VOICE
112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO
113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
The Supreme Court, as this is written, is hearing oral arguments in the case of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, challenging Mississippi’s law…
A huge win for medical freedom today.
The White House ‘has been working behind the scenes trying to reshape coverage in its favor.’
Insurgent Conservatives
PO Box 8161 Greenwood, IN 46142
If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe here.
114.) WAKING TIMES
115.) UNCOVER DC