Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday December 9, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
December 9 2021
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Good morning from Washington, where the Supreme Court will decide whether parents can tap their state’s tuition assistance to send their kids to religious schools. Sarah Parshall Perry breaks down yesterday’s arguments. A virologist tells our Fred Lucas why China wants to shut her up about where COVID-19 originated. On the podcast, a consumer advocate warns against the left’s alliance with trial lawyers. Plus: California courts abortion tourism; video games affect war in the real world; and “Problematic Women” takes issue with the transgender agenda. On this date in 1979, a commission of scientists declares the eradication of smallpox, an infectious disease with a 30% fatality rate. |
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 12.9.21
Good Thursday morning. We must begin with sad news from yesterday.
The billionaire daughter of the Publix Super Markets founder has died after having early-onset Alzheimer’s disease, the company announced Wednesday. Carol Jenkins Barnett was 65.
Barnett died Tuesday night at her home in Lakeland, Florida, Publix said in a news release. She was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2016.
Barnett was one of seven children of Publix founder George W. Jenkins, who died in 1996. According to Forbes magazine, her net worth was estimated this year at $2.1 billion.
Barnett began working as a cashier at Publix in 1972, eventually serving on its board of directors for 33 years, the company said. She was known in Lakeland — where Publix is based — for her philanthropic work, including financial support for the United Way, the founding of Bonnet Springs Park in Lakeland, a pavilion for women and children at Lakeland Regional Health and many other organizations.
“The Publix family is deeply saddened by the loss of a great humanitarian and community advocate,” said Publix CEO Todd Jones. “Carol had a generous heart and compassionate soul. Her efforts will continue to improve the lives of others for generations.”
Barnett is survived by her husband, two sons and three grandchildren. A memorial service is planned for Saturday in Lakeland.
Dominic Calabro, Florida TaxWatch mourn Carol Jenkins Barnett — FTW President and CEO Calabro issued a statement Wednesday praising Barnett’s philanthropic work and offering his condolences to her family. Barnett had deep connections to FTW. In addition to serving as a former vice-chair, her father, George Jenkins, was one of Florida TaxWatch’s six founders and her husband, Barney Barnett, is a past chair. “Carol’s philanthropic work emphasized the paramount importance of early childhood learning and she dedicated her life to bettering the education of youth in Florida. Her advocacy and philanthropy had a direct positive impact on the children of Florida and the taxpayers of this great state,” Calabro said.
After that sad news, here are a couple of items to cheer you up.
— Tom Brady is Sports Illustrated’s 2021 Sportsperson of the Year: It’s not the first time. Brady, often referred to as the GOAT (greatest of all time), won the nod for the first time 16 years ago. Since then, he’s amassed seven Super Bowl titles, including the most recent one last year leading the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Before that, he spent 20 seasons with the New England Patriots, where he helped the team win 17 division titles — including 11 consecutive — play in 13 AFC championship games and nine Super Bowls and win six Super Bowls. He was just 25 when he claimed his first Sportsperson of the Year title. Now he’s 44 and still showing fans he can dominate on the gridiron, playing with and against players much younger. Read more about why Brady stays at it in this rundown from the Tampa Bay Times.
— Rock out this Christmas with 2021’s best new holiday jams: Tired of the same tired Jingle Bells? A.V. Club has you covered with a dozen new holiday-themed tunes to jazz up your holiday spirit. You can go with a fresh take on a classic sound with Chase Cohl’s “Christmastime And You” or get classy and a bit romantic with José James’ jazzy “Christmas In New York.” Feeling nostalgic for the previous Christmas music-free ABBA? They’re on the list. Or infuse a bit of poppy country into the mix with Pistol Annies’ “Snow Globe.” The supergroup includes Miranda Lambert, Ashley Monroe and Angaleena Presley. Also on the list is Brian Fallon’s fingerpicking guitar rendition of Joan Baez’s “Virgin Mary Had One Son,” which A.V. Club describes as a “form of barroom Americana that allows Fallon to better showcase his whiskey-and-honey croon.” See the rest of the list here, complete with music videos for each song.
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Former Chief Deputy Attorney General Patricia “Trish” Conners has joined Stearns Weaver Miller’s Tallahassee office as a shareholder in the firm’s Antitrust, Competition & Consumer Protection group.
Conners is a renowned litigator and creative legal strategist specializing in antitrust and competition policy and enforcement. Her experience also includes exposure to a wide variety of government and regulatory matters.
For 36 years, she served in various senior executive positions in the Florida Attorney General’s Office, including as Chief Deputy. In this role, she supervised over 1,100 employees and engaged in a wide array of matters, representing the State of Florida on both sides of the “v.”
As Deputy Attorney General for Enforcement, she oversaw the Office’s Antitrust and Complex Enforcement, Civil Rights, Consumer Protection, False Claims, and Lemon Law Arbitration Divisions. She has extensive experience advising seven Florida Attorneys General on various enforcement, litigation, and policy issues.
During her tenure, Conners regularly interacted with opposing counsel, private plaintiffs’ counsel, other state attorneys general and counterparts at the Federal Trade Commission, U.S. Department of Justice and European agencies. She also served as a mentor to dozens of young lawyers and support staff.
In October 2020, the Florida Attorney General’s Office established the “Trish Conners Award,” presented annually “to recognize the [Office of Attorney General] lawyer who exemplifies excellence, professionalism, and demonstrated dedication to the mission of the Department of Legal Affairs.”
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@POTUS: Today, I signed an executive order directing the federal government to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050.
—@SenRickScott: Now imagine if (Joe) Biden would have done the right thing and called for the @Olympics to be moved out of Communist China? When America acts, the world follows.@POTUS is wasting his position with weakness and appeasement toward the world’s dictators.
—@GovRonDeSantis: Florida has some of the best cancer care centers in the nation. I’m proud of @FLCaseyDeSantis for fighting for cancer patients. In Florida, we are proposing historic funding for cancer research and care.
Tweet, tweet:
—@CarlosGSmith: Florida nursing homes need to be transparent and accountable. The revenue that keeps them open is OUR TAXPAYER MONEY!!!
—@fineout: Well, here we go: @GovRonDeSantis will roll out his full budget recommendations to Fla. Legislature tomorrow morning at the state Capitol. #SessionIsComing
—@VessOnSecurity: 1970: We’re going to build a global network that can withstand a nuclear war. 2021: AWS is down and my coffee machine doesn’t work.
—@ByPatForde: Louisville’s third Board of Trustees meeting in three days is at the top of the hour. The belief is that the way has been cleared for Vince Tyra to become the AD at FSU, and people may actually be able to talk about it. Our long national nightmare is approaching closure.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 1; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 8; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 13; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 20; Private sector employees must be fully vaccinated or tested weekly — 26; final season of ‘This Is Us’ begins — 26; CES 2022 begins — 27; Ken Welch’s inauguration as St. Petersburg Mayor — 28; NFL season ends — 31; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 33; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 33; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 33; Florida Chamber’s 2022 Legislative Fly-In and Reception — 33; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 34; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 36; NFL playoffs begin — 37; ‘Ozark’ final season begins — 43; ‘Billions’ begins — 45; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 57; Super Bowl LVI — 66; ‘The Walking Dead’ final season part two begins — 73; Daytona 500 — 73; Special Election for Jacksonville City Council At-Large Group 3 — 75; CPAC begins — 77; St. Pete Grand Prix — 78; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 84; The Oscars — 110; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 153; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 172; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 175; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 212; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 223; ‘The Lord of the Rings’ premieres on Amazon Prime — 267; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 302; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 337; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 340; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 372; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 435; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 596; ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 680; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 960.
— TOP STORY —
“Ethics panel finds that Nikki Fried may have violated Florida disclosure laws” via Bianca Padró Ocasio and Ana Ceballos of the Miami Herald — An ethics complaint filed days after Fried filed her paperwork to run for Governor was made by Leon County Republican Chair Evan Power. In the document, he alleged Fried failed to properly disclose over $400,000 she earned as a medical marijuana lobbyist through the consulting firm Igniting Florida. Although Power claims that Fried did not disclose lobbying work for the consulting firm Colodny Fass in 2017 and 2018, the panel’s investigative report confirms that the Office of Florida Lobbyist Registration and Compensation doesn’t show Fried was registered as a lobbyist for the firm during those two years and that she did not earn any payment from them. Once probable cause has been found, the person accused of an ethics violation has a right to a public hearing or trial where evidence can be presented.
— STATEWIDE —
“Charlie Crist blames Ron DeSantis, demands probe of ‘disturbing’ UF censorship” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — U.S. Rep. Crist has called on state education officials to investigate claims made in a “disturbing” new report by University of Florida professors detailing how faculty curbed race-related references in course materials and blocked, delayed or destroyed COVID-19 data out of fear of retaliation by DeSantis’ administration. Crist said Wednesday he’d sent a letter to the Florida Board of Governors and University System of Florida Chancellor Marshall M. Criser III demanding they look into the report’s charges and determine who called for the alleged censorship.
“Judge sets hearing on claim that Seminole Tribe’s clients are blocking petition process” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times — Las Vegas Sands attorney James McKee urged Leon County Circuit Judge Angela Dempsey to order the Tribe’s clients to halt the petition-blocking immediately. The judge denied the request for a temporary injunction but set a hearing date for Friday, Dec. 10, to hear the motion to dismiss the case. The motion to dismiss was brought by clients hired by the Tribe, including Mark Jacoby, Kara Owens, and Cornerstone Solutions Florida. Dempsey set another hearing for Tuesday, Dec. 14, to hear the request from Sands for an injunction against the group’s petition activity.
“Sports betting is again illegal in Florida, but some betters still have cash in the Hard Rock Sportsbook. Here’s how to get it back” via Wells Dusenbury of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — While the Seminole Tribe has assured that “account balances for all current players will be refunded as requested,” some users this week took to social media to report difficulties in withdrawing their money. A customer service representative says there’s no dedicated phone number for the app, but the app itself has a dedicated chat feature within the app for customer service issues. The Hard Rock Sportsbook website is hardrocksportsbook.com, and the Sportsbook app has a @HardRockSB account on Twitter. A second Twitter account, intent on helping customers, is called @HardRockSBHelp. The @Hardrocksportsbook account on Facebook is described as one that “typically replies instantly” to messages submitted there. The service’s Instagram account is instagram.com/Hardrocksportsbook, where a message feature becomes available if you’re following the account.
“Groups slam Florida over removal of anti-bullying resource” via The Associated Press — Advocacy groups are criticizing the Florida Department of Education for removing an anti-bullying webpage from its site, saying the decision will harm LGBTQ students. On Wednesday, a spokesman for the state education department said it removed the portal because it contained links to federal sites that “previously provided helpful guidance and information, but now are being used as platforms for advocacy.” The Southern Poverty Law Center said it was “shocked” by the decision. “These resources were a lifeline for students who identify as LGBTQ+, providing hope that Florida schools can remain a safe space where they would be treated fairly and can learn without fear,” said Scott McCoy, interim deputy legal director of the Southern Poverty Law Center.
DeSantis Appoints David Hall to the Florida Housing Finance Corporation Board of Directors — Hall, of Port St. Lucie, is a broker associate with Coldwell Banker Realty. He is a Florida Realtors Board of Directors member, serving on the Attainable and Workforce Housing Committee. Hall is the Immediate past chair of Big Brothers Big Sisters of St. Lucie, Indian River & Okeechobee, a past president of the Realtor Association of St. Lucie, and a member of the Florida Housing Coalition. He attended the Florida Institute of Technology. The appointment is subject to Senate confirmation.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“First Lady Casey DeSantis asks lawmakers for $100M in cancer funding, shares her cancer story” via Caroline Catherman of the Orlando Sentinel — First Lady DeSantis announced Tuesday that Gov. DeSantis is recommending $100 million in Florida’s 2022-23 budget to fund cancer treatment and research. She spoke at the Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa alongside Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo and representatives from the center. She is currently undergoing treatment at the center for a breast cancer diagnosis her husband shared with the public Oct. 4. “This comes near and dear, close to my heart, literally and figuratively,” she said. “This is something that has affected our family, something that we, unfortunately, have had to learn a lot about.” Her endorsement of cancer research is just the latest of the many causes she has supported, though her past efforts haven’t come from such a deeply personal experience.
Assignment editors — Gov. DeSantis will hold a news conference, 10 a.m., Cabinet Meeting Room. RSVP to Sydney.Booker@eog.myflorida.com.
“Aaron Bean bill would let prosecutors work to reverse wrongful convictions” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Sen. Bean filed the Senate version (SB 1200) of legislation that would allow prosecutors to file motions to vacate or set aside judgments in case of error. A hearing would have to be set in 90 days, and counsel would be appointed if the defendant lacked the resources to hire a lawyer. In the case of “clear and convincing” evidence of innocence, the judge could vacate the verdict. If the judge refused to reverse the conviction, the prosecutor could appeal that decision. In the event of a crime with a victim, that victim’s family would have the right to be at all hearings and get a notice from the prosecuting attorney.
—”Following Michigan school shooting, it’s raining gun control legislation in Tallahassee” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics
“Palm Beach County legislative delegation rejects proposal to incorporate Indian Trail district” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Members of the Palm Beach County legislative delegation voted against a local bill Wednesday that could have allowed voters in the Indian Trail Improvement District to incorporate the area and become Palm Beach County’s 40th municipality. Republican Rep. Rick Roth was backing a push for incorporation for the third straight year. Wednesday’s vote would not have finalized incorporation. Instead, lawmakers were voting on a local bill, which would have been heard by the full Legislature in the 2022 Session. If OK’d by the full Legislature, that bill would have put the issue to a vote, allowing residents to decide the issue.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida COVID-19 update: 1,886 new cases added to state tally, more in the hospital” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Florida reported 1,886 COVID-19 cases and no new deaths Tuesday, according to Wednesday’s report to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The Florida Department of Health will most likely add deaths to the total. The state has done this in the past when it has added cases and deaths to previous days during the pandemic. In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,705,899 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 61,789 deaths. About 13,322,353 eligible Floridians — 62% of the state’s population — have either received both shots of a two-dose vaccine or completed Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose vaccine. There were 1,478 people hospitalized for COVID-19, according to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Wednesday report. This data is reported from 231 Florida hospitals.
“Low vaccination rate among children in Florida concerns some pediatricians” via Senait Gebregiorgis of WFLA — Less than 10% of children between ages five to 11 in Florida are vaccinated. An estimated 1.6 million children in that age group live in the Sunshine State. Data released by the Department of Health on Dec. 3 shows 9%, or 158,017 of 5- to 11-year-old children, are vaccinated. “Certainly, it’s not as good as I had hoped it would be,” said Dr. Candice Jones, a pediatrician in Orlando. In early November, the vaccine became available to children after the FDA and CDC said it was safe. A vaccination event held at Sanford Civic Center in Seminole County on Monday, Dec. 6, was open to anyone eligible for a vaccine, but most people who showed up were parents with their children between ages 5 and 11.
“Want ivermectin for COVID-19 treatment? UF Health study may be for you” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — The University of Florida Health is looking for up to 200 people who are willing to participate in a national study aimed at learning whether three currently available over-the-counter drugs can help people manage COVID-19 symptoms and prevent hospitalizations. Initially, the university and One Florida + Clinic Research Network will be studying the effectiveness of fluticasone, an inhaled steroid commonly used to treat asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; fluvoxamine, a drug prescribed to treat depression; and ivermectin, an anti-parasitic drug in the form of a pill prescribed to treat people with infections caused by some parasitic worms. Study volunteers must be at least 30 years old, have tested positive for COVID-19 and have suffered, for less than seven days, from two or more mild COVID-19 symptoms.
— 2022 —
“Crist surpasses $5M raised for Governor’s race” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Crist has surpassed $5 million raised since launching his 2022 gubernatorial campaign, a landmark crossed after raising more than $607,000 in November, his campaign announced Wednesday. The St. Petersburg Democrat’s fundraising haul brings his campaign to $3.54 million cash on hand. More than 21,000 individual donors have contributed to either his campaign or affiliated political committee, Friends of Charlie Crist. “From my hometown of St. Pete to the Panhandle and the Keys, I am humbled to see that our campaign’s message of a Florida for all Floridians is connecting with millions of our fellow neighbors looking for change and a path forward,” Crist said.
“Hispanic voters now evenly split between parties, WSJ poll finds” via Aaron Zitner of The Wall Street Journal — The nation’s large and diverse group of Hispanic voters is showing signs of dividing its support between Democrats and Republicans more evenly than in recent elections, a new Wall Street Journal poll finds, a troubling development for the Democratic Party, which has long counted on outsize Hispanic support. One year after giving Democratic House candidates more than 60% of their vote, the survey found that Hispanic voters are evenly split in their choice for Congress. Asked which party they would back if the election were today, 37% of Hispanic voters said they would support the Republican congressional candidate and 37% said they would favor the Democrat, with 22% undecided.
“After spate of Miami school shooting threats, gun safety group Giffords PAC to endorse Val Demings” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Gun safety group Giffords PAC plans to endorse Democratic U.S. Rep. Demings‘ 2022 campaign to unseat Republican U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio during the unveiling of a gun violence memorial at Bayfront Park in Miami next week. The group’s namesake, former U.S. Rep. Gabby Giffords, will join Demings, former Democratic U.S. Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, and Giffords PAC Executive Director Peter Ambler in speaking at the Dec. 13 event, which will take place about a week after a spate of local school shooting threats took place across Miami-Dade County. The memorial is part of Giffords PAC’s nationwide effort to spread awareness about gun violence and will feature 3,000 vases representing each Floridian who died in a shooting last year, a press note from the group said.
“Spencer Roach predicts DeSantis will beat Donald Trump for President” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Are members of the Legislature in Trump’s home state done with his ambitions? State Rep. Roach, a North Fort Myers Republican, openly scoffed on Twitter at Trump’s statement saying he would defeat DeSantis in a Presidential Primary. “I’ll be the first to go on record here,” Roach tweeted. “1. Trump will not run in ‘24. 2. DeSantis runs for President regardless. 3. DeSantis would win in a Presidential primary against Trump.” Roach elaborated to Florida Politics, saying the Florida Governor simply represents where the GOP is going, not where it has already been.
“Janet Cruz to kickoff reelection campaign with Val Demings, Kathy Castor” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Sen. Cruz will kick off her reelection campaign on Dec. 11, with a little help from U.S. Reps. Demings and Castor. Cruz, a Tampa Democrat, has served Senate District 18 since 2018. So far, she is the only candidate filed to run for the district. Her campaign kickoff is noon at Sal Y Mar, Aloft Hotel. Hillsborough County Commissioners Harry Cohen, Pat Kemp and Kim Overman, as well as Tampa City Council member Guido Maniscalco and former Tampa Mayor Bob Buckhorn, will also be on hand to support Cruz.
“Erin Grall to hold fundraiser in Vero Beach next week” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Grall will hold a fundraiser next week as her campaign for her final term in the House — or possibly another contest — ramps up. According to an event invite from the third-term Republican’s political committee, Friends of Erin Grall, the fundraiser is slated for Dec. 13 from 5 p.m. to p.m. at the Quail Valley River Club in Vero Beach. The invite lists a miles-long host committee. Her only 2022 opponent, Vero Beach Mayor Robbie Brackett, is listed on the host committee for Monday’s fundraiser, which may indicate Grall is considering a run for higher office, possibly for the state Senate.
“Orlando Lamas announces $150K raised for HD 111 bid ahead of official fundraising report” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Lamas, a Hialeah-born-and-raised architect and general contractor, is running to succeed Republican Rep. Bryan Avila, who reaches term limits next year and is running for the Miami-Dade County Commission. Lamas’ campaign reported raising nearly $118,000 through Oct. 31, including at least $40,500 of his own money. As such, Lamas is claiming to have raised more than $32,000 in November — more than double his best single-month gain since April. His campaign has yet to file its official fundraising report from last month.
— CORONA NATION —
“‘It’s a sore spot’: Why officials are raising questions about Joe Biden’s vaccine donations” via Erin Banco of POLITICO — When Biden entered office, he promised the U.S. would become a leader in the effort to vaccinate the world, carrying out a campaign divorced from politics to ship millions of doses to countries in need to help end the pandemic. His aides have pledged from the podium and in front of lawmakers that the administration would not use the vaccine to curry diplomatic favors the way Russia and China have. The U.S. discussed with Myanmar officials the possibility of sending vaccine doses for months and representatives from both countries have met to talk about the vaccine in Washington and at the U.S. embassy in Yangon, Myanmar. The discussions around vaccine delivery to Myanmar raise questions about whether officials are factoring in political considerations in that process.
“Senate rejects Biden’s vaccine mandate for businesses” via The Associated Press — The vote was 52-48. The Democratic-led House is unlikely to take the measure up, which means the mandate would stand, though courts have put it on hold for now. Still, the vote gave Senators a chance to voice opposition to a policy that they say has sparked fears back home from businesses and from unvaccinated constituents who worry about losing their jobs should the rule go into effect. Lawmakers can invalidate certain federal agency regulations if a joint resolution is approved by both houses of Congress and signed by the President, or if Congress overrides a presidential veto. That’s unlikely to happen in this case. Republicans said they are supportive of the vaccine, but that the mandate amounts to government overreach.
“Most Americans have heard of the omicron variant, few are very familiar” via Chris Jackson, Neil Lloyd, James Diamond, and Mallory Newall of Ipsos — According to a new poll, a large majority of Americans have heard of the new omicron coronavirus variant, but about half say they know almost nothing about it. Few Americans intend to cancel their holiday travel plans due to the new variant. While most Americans do not plan to stop socializing, three in five say they are likely to go back to or continue wearing masks. To limit the spread of the omicron variant, most Americans support local mask requirements and travel restrictions. Support for mask requirements differs significantly between Democrats and Republicans; however, both largely support issuing a travel ban.
—”State: 98% occupancy rate in hospital intensive care units, highest level yet in pandemic” via The Associated Press
—”Michigan doctor begs for more help as state tops COVID-19 hospitalization peak” via Kristen Jordan Shamus of the Detroit Free Press
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“This inflation defies the old models” via Greg Ip of The Wall Street Journal — Last April, economists thought inflation would be around 2.5% right now. Instead, it’s over 6%. Explanations come in two schools. The demand school blames Biden and the Federal Reserve for administering too much stimulus. The supply school blames pandemic-related bottlenecks and supply chains. In fact, it’s becoming clear that neither demand nor supply by itself is to blame. Rather, this inflation was made possible only by strong demand interacting with restricted supply. The U.S. hasn’t seen anything like this combination except, perhaps, in the aftermath of World War II. This makes the solution elusive: fixing supply is largely beyond the means of the White House and Fed, but treating the problem as one of only demand could damage the economy.
“From the great resignation to lying flat, workers are opting out” via Bloomberg — The Great Resignation has U.S. workers quitting their jobs in record numbers and many are staying out of the labor force. Germany, Japan, and other wealthy nations are seeing shades of the same trend. The pandemic has taken a toll, with surveys showing an increase in feelings of burnout and a deterioration in mental health in many nations. Almost half the world’s workers are considering quitting, according to a Microsoft Corp. survey. About four in 10 millennial and Gen Z respondents say they’d leave their job if asked to come back to the office full time, a global survey by advisory company Qualtrics International Inc. found — more than any other generation.
“In 2022, companies plan to give biggest raises in more than a decade” via Aaron Gregg of The Washington Post — Businesses are expected to bump up pay an average of 3.9% in 2022, according to The Conference Board report. That’s the fastest wage growth since 2008. Higher pay for new hires was the most commonly cited reason for the uptick, according to the nonprofit business group, suggesting labor shortages and high turnover across industries could be giving employees more leverage. Inflation, which is higher than it has been in about 30 years, was the second most commonly cited factor. The raises appear broad-based: “The big jump was for executives, for regular employees, and for hourly employees,” said Gad Levanon, vice president for labor markets at The Conference Board.
“Jobs gap has grown to two unemployed workers per three openings since summer” via Gabriel T. Rubin of The Wall Street Journal — There are more than 11 million job openings in the U.S., according to estimates from job-search site ZipRecruiter, based on their analysis of online job postings and government data sources. That compares with 6.9 million people who are unemployed but say they want to work. “That’s the lowest ratio of unemployed people to job openings we’ve ever seen and that is contributing to unprecedented tightness in the labor market,” said Julia Pollak, chief economist for ZipRecruiter. In October, there were 67 unemployed job seekers for every 100 open positions. Both the unemployed and workers looking for better jobs have used that to their advantage, with pay rising sharply in lower-wage industries like leisure, hospitality, and logistics.
— MORE CORONA —
“First lab results show omicron has ‘much more extensive escape’ from antibodies than previous variants” via Carolyn Y. Johnson and Joel Achenbach of The Washington Post — The first in-depth laboratory study of the omicron variant of the coronavirus offers a mixed bag of bad news and good news. The bad: This variant is extremely slippery. It eludes a great deal of the protection provided by disease-fighting antibodies. That means people who previously recovered from a bout of COVID-19 could be reinfected. And people who have been vaccinated could suffer breakthrough infections. But the findings of the study, which tested the omicron variant of the coronavirus against the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, aren’t entirely bleak. The study found that even if the power of vaccines is diminished in the face of omicron, there’s still some protection afforded against the virus. And it suggests that booster shots could be critical in the battle with the variant.
“Two years into this pandemic, the world is dangerously unprepared for the next one, report says” via Lena H. Sun of The Washington Post — Nearly two years into a coronavirus pandemic that has killed more than 5 million people, every country, including the United States, remains dangerously unprepared to respond to future epidemic and pandemic threats. Researchers compiling the Global Health Security Index found insufficient capacity in every country, which they said left the world vulnerable to future health emergencies, including some that might be more devastating than COVID-19. The assessment of each country’s ability to prevent, detect and respond to health emergencies in 2021 was based on public information. Researchers also weighed other factors, such as public confidence in government.
“Want best protection from COVID-19 vaccine? Time of day you get it may matter, study says” via Katie Camero of the Miami Herald — A study of 2,784 health care workers from the U.K. found coronavirus antibody levels were higher in people vaccinated in the afternoon than in the morning, contrary to what past research on other shots, such as the flu vaccine, has shown. Antibody responses were also higher among people who got the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine, as opposed to the AstraZeneca shot, and in women and younger people, according to the study published in the Journal of Biological Rhythms. If a period of time is guaranteed to mount an elevated immune response, researchers say they could “recommend that people who want an extra boost from the vaccine, such as older individuals or those who are immunocompromised, schedule” their shot during a certain time of day.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Voters pessimistic about economy, Biden’s leadership, WSJ poll finds” via Aaron Zitner of The Wall Street Journal — Voters are heading into the midterm election year in a sour mood, pessimistic about the economy and short on confidence in the leadership of Biden and his Party on the issues that concern them most, a new Wall Street Journal poll finds. The survey reveals a set of danger signs for the Democratic Party as it prepares to defend narrow majorities in the House and Senate. By a large margin, voters see economic and fiscal issues, including inflation, as the top priorities for Washington, and they view the GOP as better able to handle them.
“The Achilles’ heel of Biden’s climate plan? Coal miners.” via Noam Scheiber of The New York Times — For years, environmentalists have sought compromises with labor unions in industries reliant on fossil fuels, aware that one of the biggest obstacles to cutting carbon emissions is opposition from the unions’ members. But at least one group of workers appears far less enthusiastic about the deal-making: coal workers, who continue to regard clean-energy jobs as a major risk to their standard of living. Biden has sought to address the concerns about pay with subsidies that provide incentives for wind and solar projects to offer union-scale wages. But Phil Smith, the top lobbyist for the United Mine Workers of America, said a general skepticism toward promises of economic relief was nonetheless widespread among his members. Unfortunately for Biden, this skepticism has threatened to undermine his efforts on climate change.
“Can democracy still deliver? Biden convening global summit” via Lisa Mascaro of The Associated Press — As the President launches the administration’s inaugural Summit for Democracy, determined to show the world democracy can still work, the nation that’s been long considered a shining example is seen by various measures as a backslider. It’s an unsettling moment for the world’s leading democracy as authoritarianism grows around the globe, raising questions about the United States’ ability to lead by example and intensifying pressure on the Biden administration to not only promote democracy abroad but do more to shore it up at home. At the forum, intended for some 110 participating countries to announce new commitments for strengthening democracy, Biden plans to speak about the importance of voting rights at home.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Congress gives up on attempt to make women register for the draft after GOP outcry” via Ariana Figueroa of Florida Phoenix — A bipartisan provision in an annual defense measure that would have required all young Americans to register for the military draft has been cut following a Republican backlash. Lawmakers tried to include the provision in the $777.9 billion measure, the National Defense Authorization Act of 2022, to require all Americans ages 18 to 25, including women, to be included for registration with the Selective Service System. Even though the provision had the backing of members from both parties like Rep. Chrissy Houlahan and Michael Waltz, as well as Sen. Joni Ernst and the chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Jack Reed. Republicans moved to strip the measure, arguing that women should not be forced to fight in wars.
“Rick Scott turns to an unlikely ally for help killing Build Back Better plan” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — U.S. Sen. Scott is turning to a former adversary as he continues his charge against the major spending bill the Biden administration is pushing. Florida’s former Governor sent a letter to Florida hospitals asking them to provide his office with information about the amount of Medicaid supplemental payments they receive and how the potential loss of those funds could impact their ability to treat uninsured patients. Specifically, Scott asked hospitals to provide information about Disproportionate Share Hospital payments and Low-Income Pool payments, both of which are targeted for reduction in the next decade under the proposal.
“Democrats lobby Manchin and Sinema — politely — as they try to save their priorities for the domestic policy package” via Mike DeBonis of The Washington Post — Sen. Robert P. Casey Jr. has fought for months to ensure that his fellow Democrats pump hundreds of billions of federal dollars into new subsidies for home care for the elderly and disabled. But as the party’s sweeping domestic policy bill known as Build Back Better has moved through Congress, what had once been a $400 billion plan shrunk to $150 billion by the time it passed the House last month. Now, with Senate action on deck in the coming weeks and at least two key Democrats threatening further cuts, Casey is on high alert.
“Democrats bash María Elvira Salazar for hanging pictures of Fidel Castro and Nicolás Maduro in her D.C. office” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Democrats have again slammed Salazar with accusations of hypocrisy after the Republican posted a photo on Twitter in which pictures of Venezuelan President Maduro and former Cuban dictator Castro could be seen hanging in her Washington office. Salazar, one of the most outspoken members of Congress against communist and socialist regimes and ideologies, posted the photo Wednesday. “Strategy session with my legislative staff,” she wrote with an accompanying American flag emoji. “Glad to be here in DC despite the cold!” Directly above her hung six framed photographs. Salazar explained the pictures were indeed from her 35-year career as a broadcast journalist. “Is this the best criticism you have against me?” she fired back. “Nice try.”
— CRISIS —
“Jan. 6 panel to move forward with contempt against Mark Meadows” via The Associated Press — The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection has “no choice” but to move forward with contempt charges against Meadows now that he is no longer complying with a subpoena, the panel’s chair said Wednesday. In a letter to Meadows’ attorney, Rep. Bennie Thompson said that Meadows has already provided documents to the committee, including personal emails and texts about Trump’s efforts to overturn his 2020 election defeat. Yet Meadows did not show up Wednesday for a scheduled deposition after his lawyer, George Terwilliger, told the panel that he was ending his cooperation. Thompson noted in the letter that Meadows has also published a book, released this week, which discusses the Jan. 6 attack.
“Some Jan. 6 rioters may use police brutality as a defense” via Alan Feuer of The New York Times — One group of lawyers representing those accused of assaulting the police at the Capitol is planning to make a more audacious and more difficult legal claim: They say they intend to argue that the officers themselves used excessive force on Jan. 6 and that their clients merely responded, acting in defense of other people or their own defense. This approach, while in its early stages, has gathered steam in recent weeks as defense lawyers have made their way through thousands of hours of videos of the Capitol attack, some of which, they say, show acts of brutality by officers.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Trump-backed David Perdue says he wouldn’t have certified Georgia 2020 results” via Emma Hurt of Axios — Perdue said he wouldn’t have signed the certification of the state’s 2020 election results if he had been Governor at the time. There has been no evidence widespread fraud took place in Georgia’s elections last year, and the November results were counted three times, once by hand. When Brian Kemp signed the state’s election certification, he pointed out that state law required him to do so. Perdue said he would also have called for a special session of the Legislature if he had been Governor one year ago.
“Donald Trump tries to distance himself from Sidney Powell — whom he once wanted as special counsel” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — The second-most-infamous news conference of Trump’s failed effort to subvert the 2020 Presidential election occurred at the RNC on Nov. 19 of last year. “We’re representing President Trump, and we’re representing the Trump campaign,” former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said to kick things off. Her section of the presentation was centered on unhinged claims that the 2020 election was stolen by an international alliance of actors who subverted voting machines to flip votes to Biden. “When I finish, Powell and then Jenna Ellis will follow me. And we will present in brief the evidence that we’ve collected over the last, I guess, it is two weeks.” Ellis, who did speak later, described the crew as “an elite strike-force team that is working on behalf of the president and the campaign to make sure that our Constitution is protected.”
“People are laughing at Trump’s new company” via Rick Newman of Yahoo News — Trump’s new media company, called the Trump Media & Technology Group, may suffer the same amateurish delusions. The company recently filed an “investor presentation” with the Securities and Exchange Commission is provoking guffaws among business analysts, with laughable evasions and barely any business strategy. The oddest part of the TMTG presentation is the “technology team” listed on Slide 21. The company has apparently filled 30 important jobs already, but it only lists these team members with a first name and last initial. The Chief Technology Officer is “Josh A.” “Steve E.” is VP of Engineering. One of the senior mobile developers is “BJ.”
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Markeith Loyd should be executed for killing Orlando cop, jury says” via Monivette Cordeiro of the Orlando Sentinel — Loyd should be executed for killing Orlando police Lt. Debra Clayton, a jury unanimously recommended Wednesday. The 12-member jury deliberated for about five hours over two days on whether Loyd should face the death penalty for Clayton’s slaying. Last month, the same jury convicted Loyd of first-degree murder for fatally shooting Clayton when she tried to arrest him at the Walmart on Princeton Street on Jan. 9, 2017, for killing his pregnant ex-girlfriend, Sade Dixon. As the verdict was read, Clayton’s family members cried silently. Loyd, 46, was removed from the courtroom after arguing with his attorneys and Circuit Judge Leticia Marques over when he will be sentenced and whether he will have another hearing to present additional evidence to the judge.
“A Florida Keys politician just resigned. Will there be an election? Here’s what’s next” via David Goodhue of Axios — Now that Eddie Martinez resigned from the Monroe County Commission in the Florida Keys, what happens next with his seat on the dais? Martinez announced Tuesday he was stepping down to address “health issues.” The decision comes a week after his Nov. 30 arrest on a domestic violence charge in Hialeah. For now, DeSantis will choose his interim successor from a pool of applicants that apply for Martinez’s District 3 seat, which covers the Old Town section of Key West. There will be a general election held next year that coincides with the regular election cycle. That is an August Primary and a November General Election. DeSantis’ appointment can run in the special election.
“Miami Beach moves to outlaw gas-powered leaf blowers by 2022, but final vote needed” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — Miami Beach Commissioners on Wednesday tentatively approved legislation that would outlaw gas-powered leaf blowers in city limits beginning in late 2022. The city administration said the ban, which needs final approval by the Commission before it can become law, would protect the environment from toxic emissions and stop disruptive noise from the gas-powered motors. A second vote could take place as soon as January. If approved, the city would launch a nine-month public education period beginning in February 2022 to familiarize residents and landscaping companies with the ordinance provisions. In November 2022, a nine-month warning period would follow, with code compliance officers issuing written warnings for violations. Full enforcement, including the issuance of fines, would take effect on Aug. 1, 2023.
“City Commission approves $28M for additions to Tallahassee International Airport” via Tristan Wood of Florida Politics — The Tallahassee City Commission voted unanimously to award three contracts worth $28 million for the construction of additions to Tallahassee International Airport meant to expand to carry international flights. The contracts are for the construction of a new International Passenger Processing Facility. The addition will provide an international passenger port-of-entry and a federal inspection station for the airport, necessary improvements to accommodate international flights. Mayor John Dailey told Florida Politics the addition will be a gamer-changer. Not only could it bring international flights, but it could also open the door for international shipping from the airport. The construction project is expected to commence in March 2022. Construction is expected to take about two years.
“Stellar tops off new bestbet facility in St. Johns County” via Stuart Korfhage of the Jacksonville Business Journal — Stellar recently finished “topping out” the new bestbet St. Augustine gaming facility near the Interstate 95-State Road 207 interchange. Now that the final piece of the structure has been installed, crews will turn to complete the interior of the building, Stellar said in a release. Stellar is the general contractor for the $11.6 million project, which first broke ground in July 2021. The 40,673-square-foot gaming facility will include an expansive cardroom offering traditional poker games as well as designated players games such as Ultimate Texas Hold ’em, 3 Card Poker, Fortune Pai Gow and more.
— TOP OPINION —
“What happened to American conservatism?” via David Brooks of The Atlantic — I recently went back and reread the yellowing conservatism books that I have lugged around with me over the decades. I wondered whether I’d be embarrassed or ashamed of them, knowing what conservatism has devolved into. I have to tell you that I wasn’t embarrassed; I was enthralled all over again, and I came away thinking that conservatism is truer and more profound than ever — and that to be a conservative today, you have to oppose much of what the Republican Party has come to stand for. The reasons conservatism devolved into Trumpism are many. First, race. Conservatism makes sense only when it is trying to preserve social conditions that are basically healthy. America’s racial arrangements are fundamentally unjust.
— OPINIONS —
“No, the Constitution is not ‘neutral’ on abortion” via Ruth Marcus of The Washington Post — Mississippi Solicitor General Scott Stewart laid out the argument during the oral argument last week, urging the justices not only to uphold his state’s ban on abortion after 15 weeks but to overrule its decisions finding that the Constitution protects a woman’s right to choose. Justice Brett Kavanaugh amplified Stewart’s argument, presenting it as the position of one side but leaving little doubt how much it resonated with him. The fundamental flaw here is that the Constitution exists in no small part to protect the rights of the individual against the tyranny of the majority. The Bill of Rights and the 14th Amendment exist to put some issues off-limits for majority rule. The Constitution instructs that the majority cannot force its preferred religion on the minority.
“When democracy is left stranded at the post office” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — Voters who play by the rules and trust the post office should not be disenfranchised. But that’s what happened to 286 Broward residents who were silenced in recent special primary elections for Congress, which probably made a crucial difference in a Democratic race decided by five votes. Those 286 ballots did not reach the Broward elections office by 7 p.m. on Election Day, Nov. 2, even though every one was postmarked by Nov. 1 or earlier. At least two unlucky voters mailed their ballots on Oct. 21. The USPS is a public institution funded by our taxes. But it has not fully explained why ballots mailed well in advance of the election never reached their final destination about 20 miles away.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Local GOP officials voice frustration over what they see as unnecessary fires being ignited by the Republican Party of Florida chair.
Also on today’s Sunrise:
— A Leon County judge denies a request for a temporary restraining order against groups backed by the Seminole Tribe in a ballot initiative intimidation case.
— Today’s Sunrise interview is with Debbie Woods, chair of the Bay County Republican Executive Committee. Woods filed an official grievance against Florida GOP Chair Joe Gruters for his unabashed endorsement of candidate Griff Griffitts over Brian Clowdus in the Republican primary race for HD 6.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Keanu Reeves still knows kung fu in new ‘Matrix’ trailer” via Lisa Respers France of CNN — Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss are reprising their roles as Neo and Trinity in “The Matrix Resurrections,” the fourth installment in “The Matrix” franchise. In the latest trailer for the eagerly awaited film, the pair are shown getting into some serious action. “I still know kung fu,” Reeves, as Neo, quips after taking out an apparent bad guy. “The Matrix Resurrections” hits theaters and HBO Max on Dec. 22.
To watch the latest trailer, click on the image below:
“New UF coach’s contract: $51.8 million, bigger bonuses, planes, cars” via Fresh Take Florida — University of Florida’s new football coach, Billy Napier, will be eligible for bigger bonuses than his predecessor, up to $1.5 million, and receive two luxury cars, a stadium suite and personal use of the university’s planes under his nearly $52 million salary, seven-year contract. The contract also requires Florida to pay $3 million separately as a buyout to Napier’s former employer, the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. The amount will be treated as a reimbursable employee business expense, not as an additional salary for Napier, which would help limit his tax liability. Napier’s UF contract nearly triples his salary.
“Training runs: Walt Disney World Railroad begins testing stage at Magic Kingdom” via DeWayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — The Walt Disney World Railroad has been silent for years. Thanks to construction on the Tron ride in Tomorrowland, the railway that rings Magic Kingdom theme park has been closed since December 2018. But park visitors will start seeing and hearing signs of the engines’ return soon. Disney isn’t ready to holler “all aboard” for guests yet. But the park plans to start using a steam locomotive along select segments of the new track Wednesday. A return-to-service date for the public has not been announced. Cast members have used the extended downtime for repairs, maintenance, and refurbishment on the attraction, which debuted on the theme park’s opening day in 1971.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Best wishes to our friend Richard Reeves, as well as state Reps. Webster Barnaby and Rene Plasencia, Garrett Blanton, top legislative aide Beth Lerner, Kim Siomkos, and Ben Weaver.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
5.) MORNING BREW
6.) THE FACTUAL
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7.) LIBERTY NATION
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8.) FOX NEWS
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10.) THE FEDERALIST PAPERS
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11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
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12.) THE FLIP SIDE
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Happy Thursday. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,287 words … 5 minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
🔒 At 12:30 p.m. ET today, please join Axios’ Bryan Walsh for a virtual event on data security in a hybrid world. Guests include Chris Krebs. Register here.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Former President Trump and his associates are systematically reshaping the Republican Party:
- They’re installing hand-picked loyalists across federal and state governments, and trying to destroy those considered disloyal, sources close to Trump tell Axios’ Jonathan Swan and Andrew Solender.
Why it matters: If many of Trump’s candidates win, he’ll go into the 2024 election cycle with far more people willing to do his bidding who run the elections in key states.
- Trump has made dozens of endorsements since last year’s election, with many more expected ahead of crucial primaries next year.
How it works: Trump is tapping his national network of allies to identify Republicans who were “weak” in 2020 because they refused to go along with his efforts to overturn the election. No office has proven too small.
- His apparatus touches everything from unseating governors, members of Congress, state legislators and secretaries of state, to formulating policy and influencing local school boards.
Behind the scenes: Sources who have spent time with Trump at Mar-a-Lago say it’s impossible to carry out an extended conversation with him that isn’t interrupted by his fixations on the 2020 election.
- He’s intensely focused on demands that Republicans “get smart” and pursue efforts to “audit” and overturn that result.
- “We try to get him onto other topics, but you always get dragged back,” a Trump adviser said.
Trump is trying to purge critics throughout the GOP, and replace them with loyalists who could object to certification of future elections.
- Republicans in state legislatures enacted dozens of voting laws this year — many in direct response to Trump’s pressure.
Trump is also going after the few congressional Republicans who have defied him. He endorsed primary challengers to Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Reps. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), Fred Upton (R-Mich.), Peter Meijer (R-Mich.) and Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-Wash.).
- All voted for his impeachment.
Trump’s response: “To the dismay of Democrats and Republican-sellouts, President Donald J. Trump continues to be the most dominant voice in American politics,” Trump spokesperson Taylor Budowich told Axios in a statement.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
The Consumer Price Index has replaced the monthly jobs report as the government’s most anticipated data drop, Axios’ Hans Nichols writes.
- Why it matters: Rising prices tend to lower political fortunes.
Washington and Wall Street are now waiting for the CPI number to flash at 8:30 a.m. ET around the 10th day of each month.
- This month’s report — due tomorrow morning — will give a reading of how hot inflation ran in November.
Economists expect the CPI to rise 0.7% month-on-month, for an annual rate of 6.7%.
- October’s 6.2% annual reading was the highest since 1990.
“When I was at CEA,” said Jason Furman, who chaired the Council of Economic Advisers under President Obama, “we would have an all-out mobilization around jobs day but barely noticed when the CPI came out. Now, it is almost the reverse.”
Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios
Preliminary studies suggest booster shots confer strong immunity against Omicron.
- And early South African hospitalization data indicate Omicron may cause milder disease than previous variants.
Why it matters: If both of those signals continue to hold, an Omicron wave may not be as bad as feared, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes.
Pfizer and BioNTech said yesterday that three doses of their vaccine (full vaccination + booster) effectively neutralize Omicron.
A Coast Guard helicopter crew braved poor visibility and frigid rapids to reach a car near the brink of Niagara Falls, then lowered a rescue swimmer who pulled out a woman trapped inside, AP reports.
- Sadly, the driver — a woman in her 60s — wasn’t still alive.
Roads in the area were slippery. The car is believed to have plunged into the Niagara River near a pedestrian bridge, though that’s unclear.
Video from the harrowing rescue attempt showed Petty Officer 2nd Class Derrian Duryea, in an orange suit and with an ax in his left hand, buffeted by winds and spraying water as he was lowered 80 feet through falling snow.
- After slowly spinning and swinging past the car, he was able to grab hold on the passenger side and open the door.
“As I was coming down, I was just really focused on how am I going to get in this car,” Duryea said after returning to Selfridge Air National Guard Base, near Detroit. “My sole focus was which window or door am I going in.”
- “Luckily, the car was unlocked and I didn’t have to break out any windows, and I was able to open up the passenger side door and push it up against the current.”
JPMorgan Chase Global Research says in a forecast to clients: “2022 will be the year of a full global recovery, an end of the global pandemic, and a return to normal conditions we had prior to the COVID-19 outbreak.”
- Marko Kolanovic, chief global markets strategist and co-head of Global Research, says that forecast “is warranted by achieving broad population immunity and with the help of human ingenuity, such as new therapeutics expected to be broadly available in 2022.”
The bullish report also sees “a return of global mobility, and a release of pent-up demand from consumers (e.g. travel, services).”
COVID cases and deaths are rising all across the U.S., even before Omicron takes hold, Axios’ Sam Baker and Kavya Beheraj report.
- Why it matters: Holiday travel — and the inevitable spread of the variant — will only heighten risks for unvaccinated Americans.
Where it stands: The U.S. is now averaging roughly 120,000 new COVID cases per day, a 26% increase over the past two weeks.
- Deaths are also on the rise, after tapering off in the fall.
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
Congress yesterday sent the Biden administration and corporate America an unequivocal message about the Chinese government’s repression of Uyghur Muslims:
- If this is genocide, as the U.S has declared, the response can’t be business as usual, Axios’ Zachary Basu and Sarah Mucha report.
The House overwhelmingly passed a bill to ban imports from the Chinese region of Xinjiang unless the U.S. determines with “clear and convincing evidence” the products weren’t made with forced labor.
- Major corporations, including Nike and Coca-Cola, have lobbied against the bill, which would have far-reaching consequences for U.S. supply chains deeply integrated with China.
What’s next: The Senate unanimously passed its own bill in July, but several differences must be reconciled with the House version. The White House hasn’t said whether President Biden would sign it.
Screenshot: MSNBC
Brian Williams, who announced in November that he’s leaving NBC News after 28 years, signs off tonight with the final edition of his 11 p.m. “The 11th Hour with Brian Williams” on MSNBC.
- Peter Baker of The New York Times, a regular on the opening panel Williams calls his “starting line,” told the anchorman last night: “I didn’t want this opportunity to pass without saying what a great treat and great honor it has been to share this journey with you.”
- “You are an icon for journalists,” Baker continued. “You have been a role model for us, and you are a class act all around.”
Williams, before saying good night “on behalf of all our colleagues at the networks of NBC News,” announced a podcast, “We Interrupt This Broadcast” — including voices from network bulletins, including ABC’s Sam Donaldson on the shooting of President Reagan. Hear a trailer.
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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Lightfoot aide indicted in embezzlement scheme tied to Bridgeport bank
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
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Morning Headlines
Rep. Jim McGovern often cites the late Sens. Bob Dole, a conservative Kansas Republican, and George McGovern, a liberal South Dakota Democrat, as inspirations for his own focus on hunger. More than 40 years ago, Dole and George McGovern worked together to pass legislation on food stamps, school lunches and food aid. Read more…
ANALYSIS — At least a dozen current and former House members or senators are hoping to win the governor’s mansion this cycle. And that number could grow as states finalize congressional maps and some members look for better opportunities than running for reelection, elections analyst Nathan L. Gonzales writes. Read more…
Careless adults take note: ‘Children will listen … children will see’
OPINION — Upon his death last month, composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim was lauded for writing for character rather than the hit parade. The words of “Children Will Listen” from Sondheim’s musical “Into the Woods” now sadly resonate in a country where children are learning the wrong lessons from adults who should know better. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Oil, gas firms give more cash to Democrats resisting carbon fees
Oil and gas interests this Congress have increased their giving to House Democrats who have worked to stop or weaken restrictions and fees their party’s $2.2 trillion climate and social spending bill would place on their industry, according to a CQ Roll Call analysis of campaign contributions. Read more…
GOP claims victory in final defense policy bill
The final version of the annual defense policy bill the House passed on Tuesday was overwhelmingly bipartisan, but on the margins it delivered more wins for Republicans than it did for Democrats. The GOP secured those wins as Armed Services Committee leaders worked out a compromise version of the bill last weekend. Read more…
‘The Forever Prisoner’ — condemned for what was done to him
Abu Zubaydah is one of those characters who isn’t quite a major protagonist or antagonist of the post-9/11 narrative, but his story is an integral part of it. Now he is the focus of documentary maker Alex Gibney in his latest film, “The Forever Prisoner.” Read more…
Meadows sues Jan. 6 panel as contempt charges imminent
Former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows on Wednesday filed a lawsuit against the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, as members of the panel looked to move forward with contempt of Congress charges against their former colleague for not complying with a subpoena. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Why tongues are wagging inside the House GOP
DRIVING THE DAY
THE RETURN OF RENEE — Former Rep. RENEE ELLMERS announced on Twitter Wednesday that she’s running for Congress again in North Carolina’s 4th district — and sent the House GOP gossip mill into overdrive.
Ellmers, you’ll recall, lost her primary in 2016 following allegations that she was having an extramarital affair with KEVIN McCARTHY, who also lost his bid for speaker around that time in part due to the controversy. (Both denied the allegations.) Oddly enough, her foray back into politics comes as McCarthy is in his best position yet to attain the job he’s wanted for years.
Yet the plot thickens: McCarthy met Wednesday with BO HINES, a former football player and Trump loyalist who is currently running in another North Carolina district — but who is considering switching to run against Ellmers instead. It’s unclear whether McCarthy would endorse in the race, but it’s a safe bet House Republicans will be watching this primary closely.
DEMOCRACY SUMMIT: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW — President JOE BIDEN will open his two-day Summit for Democracy with opening remarks at 8 a.m. Watch live here
He’ll then host an hourlong “Leader’s Plenary Session.”
Over 100 countries are participating. Building the list of invitees has been a fraught process run by Biden, ANTONY BLINKEN and JAKE SULLIVAN, who added a new NSC position, coordinator for democracy and human rights (filled by former journalist SHANTHI KALATHIL), to oversee the event.
The list includes some of the most committed democracies (Finland and New Zealand), some questionable cases (Serbia), and some places where democracy is slipping (Poland, Philippines, and, er, the United States). On some difficult calls, such as Brazil and India, large democracies that have seen several years of anti-democratic drift, Biden’s team decided to be inclusive. But other edge cases, such as Hungary, they didn’t invite at all.
Holding a summit to defend, strengthen and promote democracy wouldn’t be necessary if all were well with the institution. Since 2015, the total number of democracies has shrunk from 104 to 98, according to the authoritative International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA). Freedom House’s latest assessment of democracy worldwide documented 15 years of decline. The White House calls the trend a “global democratic recession.”
The Summit’s host is in the midst of democratic crisis. IDEA ranked the U.S. as a “backsliding” democracy for the first time in its annual report. Freedom House recently said of the United States, “[I]n recent years its democratic institutions have suffered erosion.”
A few sessions from today’s schedule that caught our eye:
— 10:30 a.m.: Bolstering Democratic Resilience.
The panel of leaders from Peru, Ghana, Costa Rica, and Sierra Leone is moderated by CBS’ Enrique Acevedo. How much does backsliding in the U.S. get raised?
— 1:15 p.m.: Remarks by Republican Gov. PHIL SCOTT of Vermont and Democratic Gov. JANET MILLS of Maine.
Scott is a vociferous Trump critic. Do he or Mills address Trump’s anti-democratic rhetoric and actions since the 2020 election?
— 1:25 p.m.: Closing Remarks by Vice President KAMALA HARRIS.
Part of Harris’ vice presidential portfolio is voting rights, though there is little progress to show as the issue is completely stalled in Congress. So just as Biden showed up in Scotland without his ambitious climate legislation signed into law, he and Harris will host a democracy summit without having passed any of the democracy reforms they have championed for a year.
As James Traub notes in his excellent behind the scenes report for POLITICO Magazine on the planning for the event, the Biden summit was supposed to be in person. When it was switched to a virtual confab, Biden officials added the idea of reassembling the group a year from now — after “a year of action” — when countries would be required to show progress on their democracy-boosting promises.
Democracy scholars and human rights activists have been sounding skeptical about whether there will be any serious requirements from this week’s attendees. DOUGLAS RUTZEN, who is president of the International Center for Non-Profit Law, which helped organize civil society groups for the event, told Traub he was not hopeful and that the 2-day Zoom was shaping up to be “political theater that will lead to nothing of significance.”
Meanwhile, Biden’s policies toward Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan have opened him up to charges of hypocrisy as the summit host.
“We had a real crisis moment where we said, ‘How can we have this summit when this is what happened to the Afghan people?’” SARAH HOLEWINSKI, Washington director of Human Rights Watch and head of the summit’s human rights working group, told Traub.
In Foreign Policy, Stephen M. Walt notes that the summit could even “backfire”: “If the summit and its successors do not create real results, it will reinforce the perception that democracy itself is no longer fit for its purpose.”
We’ll be watching for what concrete commitments are promised by invitees before they sign off from their video calls on Friday afternoon.
More from POLITICO Magazine: “Biden Wants to Save Global Democracy. Here’s What He Can Actually Do.”
Good Thursday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
BIDEN’S THURSDAY:
— 8 a.m.: The president will deliver opening remarks at the virtual Summit for Democracy.
— 8:15 a.m.: Biden will host the Leaders’ Plenary Session at the virtual Summit for Democracy.
— 10 a.m.: The president, first lady JILL BIDEN, the vice president and second gentleman DOUG EMHOFF will attend the congressional tribute ceremony for BOB DOLE, where Biden will deliver remarks.
— 12:30 p.m.: Biden will hold a call with Ukrainian President VOLODYMYR ZELENSKYY to discuss the Russian military presence on the Ukrainian border.
— 1:45 p.m.: Biden will hold a call with the leaders of the Bucharest Nine group of eastern flank NATO Allies to brief them on his call with Russian President VLADIMIR PUTIN.
— 3:30 p.m.: Biden and Harris will meet with the White House Covid-19 Response Team.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 1:30 p.m.
The SENATE is in.
The HOUSE will meet at 10 a.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
ALL POLITICS
A RARE WIN FOR DEMS ON REDISTRICTING — The North Carolina Supreme Court on Wednesday ordered the primary election be delayed for two months “as gerrymandering lawsuits play out that could lead to redrawn districts,” the Raleigh News & Observer’s Will Doran reports. “It’s a win for the liberal voters and groups that have challenged the new political maps for those races as being unconstitutionally gerrymandered, and a loss for the Republican lawmakers who drew the maps. All primaries, not just the ones using disputed maps for U.S. House and the state House and Senate, are being delayed to May 17 from March 8.
MEANWHILE, IN VA. — The new congressional map is good news for Democrats, as it should give them a chance to hold onto their current share of seven of the 11 seats in the state. But Rep. ABIGAIL SPANBERGER — a rising star in the Democratic Party — is hurt by it, Ally Mutnick reports. “[S]ome Democrats are frustrated with how the mapmakers handled the three women in the delegation: Spanberger, [ELAINE] LURIA and Democratic Rep. JENNIFER WEXTON. Spanberger is the only incumbent left without a home. She currently represents the 7th District but was grouped with GOP Rep. ROB WITTMAN in the new, red-leaning 1st District. The new 7th District, meanwhile, heavily favors Democrats but is nestled in the suburbs of northern Virginia, roughly an hour or so north of Spanberger’s home in Glen Allen.”
ABOUT PERDUE’S ABOUT-FACE — Former Georgia Sen. DAVID PERDUE once told Republicans in Washington that he didn’t want to run for Senate again because he couldn’t deal with Trump’s election falsehoods, multiple sources have told Playbook in the past. But he opened up about his decision to run statewide to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. His motivation? STACEY ABRAMS announcing her campaign for the post.
“When Stacey Abrams announced, it forced my hand, honestly. I was conflicted … The last thing I want to do is run a campaign. But on the other hand, I can’t see the state go down this road that Stacey Abrams wants to go down. Kemp has failed to unite the party, and he can’t defeat her,” he said. Greg Bluestein has more
CONGRESS
NDAA WATCH — Progressives had big plans this year when Democrats took full control of Washington — before political reality got in the way. For proof, look no further than the National Defense Authorization Act. “Democrats hold power in the House, Senate and White House for the first time in more than a decade, yet the high-profile defense bill got more GOP votes than from Biden’s own party,” Andrew Desiderio and Connor O’Brien write. “That dynamic underscores the disconnect between the sky-high expectations for Democrats and the reality of their ultra-slim majorities in Congress, which have often required them to get buy-in from Republicans in order to approve high-profile legislation.”
DEBT CEILING TICK-TOCK — Burgess Everett and Marianne LeVine have the backstory of how McConnell and Schumer struck the legislative pretzel of a deal to avert a default. It all started before Thanksgiving: “After receiving a rare request from MITCH MCCONNELL to discuss the debt limit in November, CHUCK SCHUMER dialed NANCY PELOSI but received no answer. Given the urgency, he rushed to their joint press conference and waited for her to finish speaking.”
“After she concluded, the two Democratic leaders walked to Schumer’s car and he laid out a possible solution to a monthslong partisan standoff on the debt limit. McConnell wanted to give Democrats a quick vote to raise the debt ceiling on their own and finally take the debt limit imbroglio off the table, according to a person familiar with the discussions.”
WHOOPS? — Rep. MADISON CAWTHORN (R-N.C.) “brought a GOP congressional candidate onto the House floor Tuesday night, likely in violation of House rules,” sources tell The Hill’s Scott Wong. “Cawthorn was able to do so by telling House security that his guest, Tennessee Republican ROBBY STARBUCK, was one of his House staffers. Cawthorn declined to comment Wednesday night, saying he did not do hallway interviews; Starbuck did not return a request for comment.”
ANTI-MANDATE PUSH GETS A BIPARTISAN BOOST — Months after the GOP started railing against Biden’s vaccine mandates, the political landscape on the issue took a turn in Washington yesterday. Two Senate Democrats — JON TESTER and JOE MANCHIN — joined all Republicans to approve a resolution nullifying the administration’s rule that businesses with more than 100 workers require employees to get vaccinated or do weekly testing.
The rule will never be overturned: Even if the resolution musters the three Democratic votes it would need to pass the House, Biden would veto it. But Wednesday’s Senate vote is a reminder that the politics of vaccine mandates are shifting. AP has more
THE PANDEMIC
GOOD OMICRON NEWS? — CDC Director ROCHELLE WALENSKY told the AP in an interview that the data on the Omicron variant “is very limited and the agency is working on a more detailed analysis of what the new mutant form of the coronavirus might hold for the U.S.,” but that of the confirmed cases in the U.S., “nearly all of them were only mildly ill.” This is obviously good news for the Biden White House, which a few weeks ago faced the possibility of a daunting new front in the war against the pandemic, and for the nation. More from AP.
— More than 200 million people in the United States have been fully vaxxed against Covid-19. More from NYT’s Ron DePasquale
THE WHITE HOUSE
OUT WITH THE OLD … EVENTUALLY — Biden would like to focus on national security threats of the future, but for a while now it seems like Biden is having trouble shaking loose from the past. “The new president’s team has doggedly tried to push forth with its agenda,” Jonathan Lemire writes, citing European trips, putting pressure on China and today’s Summit for Democracy. “But privately, White House aides have portrayed 2021 as a ‘rebuilding year,’ a moment to repair the damage caused by former President Donald Trump’s agenda which prioritized competition with allies and often turned a blind eye to power grabs by autocrats.”
THE NEW AMBASSADOR TO KENYA — Biden tapped former CEO of Hewlett Packard MEG WHITMAN to be the U.S. ambassador to Kenya, the White House announced Wednesday. CNBC’s Brian Schwartz writes that “Whitman spent decades in high-level corporate roles, but she has also been politically active for years. … Last year, she gave $500,000 to the Biden Victory Fund, a joint fundraising committee that benefited the Biden campaign and the Democratic National Committee.”
JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH
PLEADING THE FIFTH — Kyle Cheney and Nicholas Wu report that “witnesses seeking to evade testimony to the Jan. 6 committee may have landed on their most potent strategy: Pleading the Fifth. Three witnesses with ties to Trump have signaled they intend to invoke their constitutional right against self-incrimination — JOHN EASTMAN, the attorney who helped lead a campaign pressuring MIKE PENCE to block Congress from certifying Biden’s victory; JEFFREY CLARK, the Justice Department lawyer whom Trump considered installing as acting attorney general to support his effort to subvert the election; and ROGER STONE, a longtime Trump confidant.
“Their assertions are the latest, and perhaps stiffest, test for the Jan. 6 committee … Legal experts say the committee has few options once a witness pleads the Fifth — and the choices they do have are risky or impractical.”
MEADOWS SUES — Former Trump chief of staff MARK MEADOWS Wednesday sued “to block a subpoena from the Jan. 6 committee, arguing that it unconstitutionally intrudes on Trump’s powers to invoke executive privilege,” our Betsy Woodruff Swan, Kyle Cheney and Josh Gerstein report.
Meadows filed the suit “in the U.S. District Court in Washington against Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the members of the Capitol riot panel and the committee itself. His attorney says he’s been put in an ‘untenable position’ of choosing to defy the committee — and risk criminal prosecution — or defy his former boss Trump’s attempt to assert executive privilege to block his testimony.” We have to wonder: How much of this is a bid by Meadows to sell copies of his book?
PLAYBOOKERS
Hillary Clinton publicly revealed an excerpt of the victory speech she’d prepared to deliver on election night 2016.
Gene Weingarten announced he’s leaving the Washington Post after 30 years after contract talks fell through.
Meg Whitman’s time leading the ill-fated Quibi featured prominently in the White House’s announcement of her nomination as ambassador to Kenya.
Ainsley Earhardt memorialized Fox News’ America-themed Christmas tree, which was targeted by an arsonist this week. “It is about the holiday season. It’s about Jesus. It’s about Hanukkah,” she said. “It is about everything that we stand for as a country.”
Drew Hammill told Sean Spicer that Nancy Pelosi hasn’t had any conversations with the White House about becoming ambassador to the Holy See.
Sanna Marin, Finland’s 36-year-old prime minister, went clubbing this weekend in Helsinki, stayed out past 4 a.m. and left her phone at home — which is how she missed a text message informing her that she needed to stay home and isolate due to a possible Covid exposure.
Penn Station, long the bane of … well, pretty much anyone who’s had to travel through it, should be added to the National Register of Historic Places — at least according to a New York state agency — a move that could kill off hopes of redeveloping the fleapit.
IN MEMORIAM — via WaPo’s Adam Bernstein: “Claudia Levy, a Washington Post journalist and union activist who battled successfully in the 1970s for the increased hiring of women in the newsroom as well as more equitable pay and opportunities for their advancement, died Dec. 3 at her home in the Bannockburn community of Bethesda, Md. She was 77. The cause was complications of cervical-spine surgery, said her sister, Andrea Polk. In a reporting and Newspaper Guild career spanning nearly 40 years, Ms. Levy was wholly unimpressed by power and wholly unintimidated by those who wielded it.”
SPOTTED: Mark Meadows on the corner of Pennsylvania Avenue SE and Independence Avenue SE on Wednesday afternoon. Per a tipster: A man Meadows was walking with was heard saying, “Who’s your lawyer again?” to which Meadows responded, “George Terwilliger.”
SPOTTED: Rapper French Montana was on the Hill on Wednesday promoting immigration reform and drug sentencing reform with the Buried Alive Project. He met with Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) and Reps. Dina Titus (D-Nev.), Susie Lee (D-Nev.), Kathleen Rice (D-N.Y.), Ritchie Torres (D-N.Y.), Byron Donalds (R-Fla.), Ben Cline (R-Va.), Marc Veasey (D-Texas), Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), Shontel Brown (D-Ohio), Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.) and Adriano Espaillat (D-N.Y.). On Tuesday night, he had dinner at Café Milano with Rep. Jim Costa (D-Calif.), Trey Baker, Cameron Trimble, Erica Loewe, Nicole Varner, Yebbie Watkins, David Urban, Eric Bovim and Noe Garcia.
OUT AND ABOUT — On Wednesday night, the Norwegian Embassy celebrated its official reopening after a two year renovation. Norway Crown Prince Haakon did the honors of officially re-opening the renovated embassy by ceremoniously breaking a block of ice. The evening featured a performance by an ice band — literally playing instruments sculpted from ice from Norway. SPOTTED: Norwegian Ambassador Anniken Krutnes, Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) and Jim Risch (R-Idaho), Opal Vadhan, Paul Jones, Spencer Boyer, Rachel Levitan, Matthew Hickey, Jim Sciutto, Garrett Haake, Jackie Alemany, John Hudson, Josh Dawsey, Kate Sullivan, Kaitlan Collins and Carl Hulse.
— The Annual Women in Foreign Policy Benefit was held at the Ritz Carlton on Wednesday. The event, co-chaired by Kristi Rogers and Lois Romano, featured honored speakers Sens. Deb Fischer (R-Neb.) and Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.) moderated on a panel by Gloria Dittus. SPOTTED: French Ambassador Philippe Étienne, EU Ambassador Stavros Lambrinidis, Cathy Russell, Rachel Pearson, Kathleen Doherty, Mary Brady and Capricia Marshall.
MEDIA MOVE — Daniel Stublen is now an editor at Agence France-Presse. He previously was a special project producer for France Télévisions and is a National Journal alum.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Pinkston, a strategy and comms consultancy, has acquired Pliris Strategies. Donelle Harder will join Pinkston as an SVP. She is the founder and CEO of Pliris and is a Kevin Stitt, Kenny Marchant and Jim Inhofe alum.
TRANSITIONS — KP Trueblood will be president and COO of the Brooklyn Museum. She currently is COS at the ACLU and is a Hillary for America and Obama White House alum. … Christopher McCaffery is now assistant to the president at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. He previously was a program associate at the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. …
… John Taylor is now senior associate for client services at Morning Consult. He previously was a marketing manager at IMGE. … Kyle Gerron is now senior manager of government affairs at the Society of Interventional Radiology. He previously was a VP at DDC Public Affairs. … Gordon Gray is now a professor of practice at Penn State’s School of International Affairs. He most recently was COO at the Center for American Progress and was a career diplomat.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) … Wendell Primus of Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office (75) … The Boston Globe’s James Pindell … Brian McGuire of Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck … Tamara Cofman Wittes … Alexandra DeSanctis Marr … Shoshana Weissmann … Brunswick Group’s Neal Wolin (6-0) … ABC’s Terry Moran … Veronique Rodman … MSNBC’s Jonathan Wald … Google’s Cris Turner … Aniela Butler … Samantha Tubman of the Obama Foundation … Megan Devlin of the Meridian International Center … Karen Harbert of the American Gas Association … Finsbury Glover Hering’s Eric Wachter (43) … K&L Gates’ Darrell Conner … Andrew Ricci of Riccon Strategic Communications … Emily Kopp … Tricia Enright of the Senate Commerce Committee … Dave Boundy … Kelsey Gorman of Miller Strategies … John E. Smith … Scott Schloegel of the Motorcycle Industry Council … former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle … former Reps. Ciro Rodriguez (D-Texas) and Pete Olson (R-Texas) … Laena Fallon … Kathryn Cameron Porter … Richard Allen Smith … Eric Garcia … Jessica Furst Johnson … Anne Bradbury
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
|
29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Commie Democrat Psychopaths Are In Crime Denial
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing Friends. My first act as president will be an executive order requiring that all celebrity baby names be reviewed by a panel of sane people.
I would never presume to try and figure out the minds of Democrats but every once in a while I am overcome by the urge to grab one and shake him until he tells me what alien planet he lives on.
Yeesh, these people and their alternative realities.
The farther left one of them goes, the more removed from reality they become. For the longest time, I thought that they were all merely pathological liars. Most are, of course, but I am now beginning to believe that some of them are in the midst of a full psychotic break.
To the surprise of no one on the conservative side of the political aisle, the Dem-controlled cities that are run by BLM/Antifa fans have been experiencing…struggles with crime since they were gripped by the “defund the police” frenzy in 2020.
Many of these cities hurried to hit the reset button and re-fund their police forces in an effort to combat crime. Cops haven’t exactly been willing to rush back in droves to municipalities that were gleefully giving them the finger in the name of wokeness just a year ago, but at least the people in charge are admitting there’s a problem.
That stands in sharp contrast to the approach recently taken by prominent Democrats in a couple of America’s biggest crime-riddled hellholes: Chicago and Philadelphia.
Kevin has a story about Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s “thinking outside the box” solution to her city’s infestation of thieves. She’s opted for victim shaming:
I’m disappointed that they’re not doing more to take safety and make it a priority. For example, we still have retailers that won’t institute plans like having security officers in their stores, making sure that they’ve got cameras that are actually operational, locking up their merchandise at night, chaining high-end bags. These purses can be something that is attracting a lot of organized retail theft units,”
“If only she hadn’t worn that dress…”
Stupid stores with your wares that attract the eyes of lawless scum! Why can’t you hire some aging, overweight security guards and stop making your mayor look bad? Ingrates!
By the way, Chicago is having its worst murder year since 1994 while Mayor Mouthfoot is playing make-believe.
Let us move on to Philadelphia, the City of Brotherly Thugs. Rick writes about the city’s district attorney, who wants the public to know that EVERYTHING IS FINE:
Larry Krasner, the Soros-backed District Attorney in Philadelphia, wants everyone in the city to know that he’s got things under control. Sure, there’s been a record spike in homicides, but besides that, everything in Philly is just peachy.
“We don’t have a crisis of lawlessness, we don’t have a crisis of crime, we don’t have a crisis of violence,” the district attorney told reporters at a Monday press conference. “It’s important that we don’t let this become mushy and bleed into the notion that there is some kind of big spike in crime. There isn’t. There is not a big spike in crime. … There is not a big spike in violent crime. Neither one of these things is true.”
Rick goes on to explain that Krasner is engaging in some political sleight of hand here. Krasner is able to say that crime isn’t spiking because he simply isn’t prosecuting criminals who would have been prosecuted in the past. Progressive DAs are almost always pro-criminal.
Oh, wait…Philly is also in the midst of a frightening increase in homicides. The city has suffered its highest body count since 1960.
So, there is no real problem as long as you ignore the dead guy on your lawn.
Both of these cities have been electing Democrats for decades, so it is difficult to feel much in the way of pity for them. Maybe they should seriously consider not voting like paste-eaters going forward.
Nah, better just go hire a mall cop and not pay any attention to the smell of rotting corpse coming from the alley.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
VodkaPundit: Top Ten Other Kamala Harris Make-Work Jobs
Chicago Mayor Blames Stores, Not Woke Nonsense, for Boom in Robberies
Just Don’t Call Them Conservative
Epic Ratio: Dallas Cops Brag About Civil Forfeiture and Get Owned on Social Media
New Study Finds that Christianity Is the #1 Religion Targeted in Hate Crimes
VodkaPundit, Part Deux: Omicron ‘May Signal the End of COVID-19’ According to Healthcare CEO
As White House Digs In, Many High-Profile Democrats Oppose Vaccine Mandates
Burn it all down. California Vows to Be Abortion ‘Sanctuary’ if SCOTUS Overturns Roe
Sorry Libs, Americans Think Trump Did Better Fighting COVID Than Biden
Biden vs. Putin: Four Takeaways from the Video Meeting
The Arsonists in the Media Say the Fire is Too Hot
Hispanic Voters Are Now Evenly Split Between Parties
Guess Who Trump’s ‘Tax Cuts for the Rich’ Benefited the Most
How a Never-Used Provision in the Constitution Could Revolutionize Congress
Biden’s Supreme Court Commission Takes No Stance on Court Packing
Grinch Torches Fox News ‘All-American Christmas Tree’
Despite Near-Record Homicides, Philadelphia DA Proclaims No ‘Crisis of Crime’
Jussie Smollett’s Testimony Was ‘Unparalleled Disaster,’ Experts Say
Schools Closing Again and It’s Not Entirely Due to Pandemic
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: Why Is Dr. Oz Running as a Republican?
Drama Heating Up with Mark Meadows Suing Nancy Pelosi, January 6 Select Committee
Not Just Embarrassing But ‘Dangerous’: Nikki Haley Slams Biden’s Foreign Policy
Latest Poll Numbers Spell Doom for Democrats — and Bust Some Narratives Along the Way
Tulsi Gabbard Delivers a Message on Russia and Ukraine Sure to Tick off Everyone
Biden’s Remarks in Kansas City Are a Complete Acid Bath
Did DeSantis Promise To Sign Constitutional Carry Bill?
Cam&Co. Parkland Dad Says Oxford High School Shooting Preventable
Political Pearl-Clutching Over Permitless Carry Won’t Stop Its Progress
European CDC: Out of hundreds of cases of Omicron here, not a single one involves severe illness
Q-Poll: Gov. Greg Abbott leads Beto O’Rourke by 15 points
The National Defense Authorization Act for 2022 will create a UFO reverse engineering program
VIP
The Kruiser Kabana Episode 163: Comedy Isn’t Dead Even Though Liberals Keep Trying to Kill It
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The Left’s Next Coup has Already Begun
Young Democrats Have Been Taught To Hate
Why Did Another 4.2 Million People Leave Their Jobs in October?
CNN Responds to White House Pressure With Glowing Coverage of 5-Cent Drop in Gas Prices
GOLD Omicron Is Going to Disappoint the Nuts
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The Difference Between Disinfecting and Sanitizing, According to the CDC
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30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: It’s Instagram’s Turn Before Congress
Plus: A clinical psychologist on social media and mental health.
The Dispatch Staff |
Happy Thursday! Quick reminder, as some people apparently need one: Please do not, under any circumstances, travel to Midtown Manhattan at 12:14 a.m., climb to the top of a 50-foot-tall Christmas tree, set it on fire, and run away. That is arson, and you will go to jail for arson.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- Pfizer and BioNTech announced preliminary results of a laboratory study yesterday that showed two doses of the companies’ COVID-19 vaccine likely still protects individuals from severe disease induced by the Omicron variant, but two doses may not be sufficient to protect against infection. A regimen of two vaccine doses plus a booster, however, was found to be about as effective against the Omicron variant as a regimen of two vaccine doses was against the original SARS-CoV-2 strain.
- President Joe Biden on Wednesday ruled out sending U.S. troops to Ukraine in the event of a Russian invasion. “We have a moral obligation and a legal obligation to our NATO allies, if they were to attack under Article 5,” he told reporters. “That obligation does not extend to … Ukraine. But it would depend upon what the rest of the NATO countries are willing to do as well. But the idea the United States is going to unilaterally use force to confront Russia from invading Ukraine is not in the cards right now.”
- Social Democratic Party leader Olaf Scholz was officially sworn in as German chancellor on Wednesday, ending Angela Merkel’s 16-year run as leader of the country. In an interview with ZDF TV yesterday, Scholz said Russia would face “consequences” if it invaded Ukraine, but declined to confirm whether shutting down the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline is on the table.
- Canada and the United Kingdom on Wednesday joined the United States and Australia in their diplomatic boycott of the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. “We are extremely concerned by the repeated human rights violations by the Chinese government,” Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said.
- The House of Representatives voted 428-1 on Wednesday to pass the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, which would ban the import of all products manufactured in China’s Xinjiang region unless Customs and Border Protection determines the goods were not made with convict, forced, or indentured labor. The Senate passed a similar bill over the summer, but the two chambers need to reconcile any differences before sending it to President Biden, who has not said whether he will sign it or not.
- In a largely symbolic gesture, the Senate voted 52-48 on Wednesday to block the Biden administration’s vaccine or testing mandate for large businesses, with Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin and Jon Tester crossing party lines to vote with all 50 Republicans. Enforcement of the mandate has already been paused by federal courts, and White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters this week that President Biden would veto the measure if it manages to pass the House.
- The January 6 Select Committee is moving to hold former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows in contempt of Congress after Meadows—who has reportedly turned over thousands of pages of texts and emails to the committee—informed lawmakers through his lawyer that he will no longer cooperate with the investigation. Meadows sued the nine members of the select committee and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Wednesday in an effort to block enforcement of “two overly broad and unduly burdensome subpoenas.”
- An appeals court on Wednesday granted a temporary stay allowing Apple to hold off on making court-ordered changes to its App Store payment system while the tech company’s appeal works its way through the system. Back in September, a U.S. district judge ordered Apple to do away with its policy prohibiting app developers from offering users alternative, non-Apple payment systems within 90 days.
Lawmakers Grill Instagram CEO
Over the past five years, it’s become something of a Washington, D.C., time loop: A tech company gets ravaged by scandal. The tech company’s CEO gets hauled before Congress. Lawmakers yell at the tech company’s CEO for several hours. The tech company’s CEO evades questions. Lawmakers announce that new federal regulations are imminent. Partisan differences—and considerable industry lobbying—thwart any legislative efforts. Another tech company gets ravaged by scandal.
Yesterday, it was Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri’s turn in the barrel.
A few months back, the Wall Street Journal published “The Facebook Files,” a series of investigative reports—based on a whistleblower’s leaked documents—that detailed various missteps made or hard truths suppressed by tech giant. And as we wrote to you a few months back, one of the most devastating stories had to do with Instagram, the photo-sharing app Facebook acquired for $1 billion in 2012.
[The report] unearthed internal Facebook research showing the company was aware of Instagram’s deleterious effects on younger users, particularly teenage girls.
“We make body image issues worse for 1 in 3 teen girls,” reads the headline of one slide in a November 2019 presentation. Another notes that “teens blame Instagram for increases in the rates of anxiety and depression” and “teens who struggle with mental health say Instagram makes it worse.”
As the Senate Consumer Protection, Product Safety, and Data Security Subcommittee hearing got underway Wednesday afternoon, Mosseri—a longtime Facebook employee who was elevated to head of Instagram in 2018 after the app’s two co-founders abruptly departed—sought to paint a rosier picture of the company. “Sometimes young people come to Instagram dealing with hard things in their lives,” he said in his opening testimony. “I believe Instagram can help many of them in those moments.”
Mosseri came prepared to tout a number of proactive steps the company had taken in the wake of the Facebook Files to prioritize teen mental health. Instagram’s new “Take A Break” feature, if turned on, will suggest users close out of the app if they’ve been scrolling for too long. New tools let users bulk delete old posts and automatically dismiss messages including certain words or coming from people they don’t follow, and the company said it would be “stricter” about the kinds of posts its algorithm recommends to teenagers. Controls coming early next year will give parents the ability to manage the amount of time their child spends on the app and send them a notification if their child reports another user. Most of these developments were announced Tuesday morning, slightly more than 24 hours ahead of yesterday’s hearing.
Lawmakers noticed. “What they’re doing is a half measure,” Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn—the subcommittee’s ranking member—told CBS News in the lead up to Mosseri’s testimony. “They’re doing it because they know that legislation is coming soon, and they are quite concerned about that.”
Facebook has for years now been begging Congress to regulate certain segments of its own business, in part because it’s tired of all the headaches and in part because regulations tend to entrench dominant players that can afford to comply with them and freeze out upstarts that can’t. Mosseri took a similar approach yesterday.
A Clinical Psychologist on Social Media and Mental Health
In light of Mosseri’s testimony before Congress, we wanted to better understand the existing research on whether there’s a connection between social media use and mental health—and if Instagram’s proposed tweaks would have any effect. So we called Dr. Jacqueline Sperling, a psychology professor at Harvard Medical School and director of the McLean Anxiety Mastery Program at McLean Hospital in Belmont, Massachusetts.
Our conversation is below, edited for length and clarity.
TMD: Could you summarize what we know about the relationship between social media use and mental health? Has it been around long enough to be able to draw some conclusions?
Dr. Jacqueline Sperling: Research has shown links between social media use and negative impacts on one’s mood, like depression and anxiety. It can also negatively impact one’s self-esteem and their body image, as well as contribute to sleep difficulties. But it’s important to keep in mind the type of social media use, because it’s not all types of use that are connected to those negative impacts.
TMD: Could you break down those different types of social media?
Sperling: There is self-oriented vs. other-oriented, and active vs. passive. So, for example, a self-oriented and active activity might be updating one’s profile. That activity, in and of itself, is not necessarily linked to a negative impact on one’s mood. It’s the passive activities—such as scrolling through one’s newsfeed—and other-oriented activities that create opportunities for social comparison. That’s the type of engagement that has been found to be linked to negative impacts on one’s mood, and body image and self-esteem difficulties.
You might see that someone has more likes than you got, or you might see different comments on their post compared to yours. You may see forms of social exclusion, friends of yours who are posting a picture at an event to which you were not invited. And then you also can see people posting pictures where they’ve used filters to adjust their photos before posting them. When people constantly see photos that have had filters applied, that may also distort their perspective of what a common body type actually is.
People select snippets of positive experiences to post; it’s not their entire life that is displayed on social media. Other users may then see that in someone’s profile and think, “Oh God, their life is better than mine.”
Worth Your Time
- Right on cue: U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy’s office published a report this week on the state of youth mental health in America, and the findings are grim. “Recent research covering 80,000 youth globally found that depressive and anxiety symptoms doubled during the pandemic, with 25% of youth experiencing depressive symptoms and 20% experiencing anxiety symptoms,” it reads. “In early 2021, emergency department visits in the United States for suspected suicide attempts were 51% higher for adolescent girls and 4% higher for adolescent boys compared to the same time period in early 2019.” The report offers possible solutions, outlining the role various institutions—families, schools, health care organizations, social media companies, employers, governments, etc.—can play in reversing some of these trends. “For a generation of children facing unprecedented pressures and stresses, day in and day out, change can’t come soon enough,” the report concludes. “It won’t come overnight..”
- The Washington Post on Wednesday used CDC data to put together an interactive graphic that lets readers visualize just how effective COVID-19 vaccines are at preventing hospitalization and death. At points during October’s Delta surge, for example, the data visualization tool shows that unvaccinated people were more than 19 times as likely to die from COVID-19 than their vaccinated counterparts. “It’s clear from the data—and the visual above—that there is an appreciable benefit to the vaccine.”
Presented Without Comment
Rep. Dan Crenshaw torched some of his most prominent Republican colleagues this week, calling members of the hard-right House Freedom Caucus “grifters” and “performance artists” who only “know how to say slogans real well.” trib.al/PyuUMFC
Also Presented Without Comment
The bride walked down the aisle. The groom’s buddy made a toast. There was dancing at the reception. And it all happened in the metaverse. nyti.ms/3EFAlVu
Toeing the Company Line
- In yesterday’s Sweep, Sarah takes an early look at some close 2022 Senate races that could determine which party finds itself in the majority. “Republicans, after all, need only one pickup to win control of the Senate,” she writes. “But it’s worth remembering that they have at least three open seats to defend, with no incumbent in Ohio, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania.”
- This week’s Capitolism (🔒) focuses on the history of China and the World Trade Organization and addresses claims that, knowing what we know now, China’s entry into the body was a mistake. “It’s a straightforward political story, but—like most straightforward political stories—it suffers from several historical, economic, and factual flaws,” Scott Lincicome writes.
- In Wednesday’s G-File (🔒), Jonah takes a victory lap on the demise of the term “Latinx,” which even Democratic strategists and lawmakers are now disavowing. “The Democratic Party and mainstream media are bedeviled by the egghead equivalent of the lab leak theory,” he writes. “They refuse to observe the intellectual and academic protocols of good hygiene. If grad schools are going to teach intersectionality, they should at least post signs saying, ‘Wash Your Hands of This Stuff Before Talking to Normal People.’”
- Audrey and Harvest write about how K-12 education could become a sticking point for Virginia Democrats who are seeking reelection to Congress next year, in particular Reps. Abigail Spanberger and Elaine Luria.
- And Khaya dives into the lawsuit filed against The Gateway Pundit and founder Jim Hoft by two elections workers from Fulton County, Georgia, who were targeted after Hoft published false stories about them.
Let Us Know
Do you use social media? Do you consider yourself to have a healthy relationship with social media?
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).
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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
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— Amid a promising national environment for Republicans, we are changing ratings in 4 gubernatorial contests — 3 of which are in the GOP’s favor. — The power of gubernatorial incumbency will be tested in 2022, both by a plethora of Republican primary challengers to sitting GOP governors and, for Democrats, by the national political climate in next year’s general election. — This election will feature a relatively high number of incumbents running for reelection compared to many previous midterm years (midterms are when the bulk of the gubernatorial elections are held). — Despite playing defense in many vulnerable races across the country, Democrats have the 2 clearest gubernatorial pickup opportunities. Table 1: Crystal Ball gubernatorial rating changes
Map 1: Crystal Ball gubernatorial ratingsTesting the power of gubernatorial incumbencyNext year’s packed gubernatorial slate will be defined in large part by the push and pull between a couple of vital factors: the power of incumbency versus the power of the political environment. The dangers posed by the political environment are different for both parties. For Democratic incumbents, the usual midterm drag for the party that holds the White House, compounded by Joe Biden’s weak approval rating, represents the main “environmental” threat to their reelections. Democratic incumbents are running for second terms in many states where they could or will be vulnerable if this gnarly environment persists into next fall. Just to put this into perspective, Gov. Phil Murphy (D-NJ) won reelection last month by a surprisingly close 3-point margin in a state that Biden won by 16 points. Democratic incumbents are defending 7 states next year where Biden won by a smaller margin than New Jersey: Colorado, New Mexico, Maine, Minnesota, Michigan, Nevada, and Wisconsin (in descending order of Biden margin), as well as an 8th, Kansas, where Biden lost by nearly 15 points. A big and roughly uniform swing against the Democrats next year could wipe out many of their governorships. Meanwhile, a potentially turbulent primary environment may be a bigger threat to this cycle’s Republican incumbents, as former President Donald Trump has already endorsed a few challengers to sitting gubernatorial incumbents. Most notably, Trump enticed former Sen. David Perdue (R-GA) into a challenge to Gov. Brian Kemp (R-GA), which we’ll explore a little more deeply below. Trump also backed hard-right former state Rep. Geoff Diehl (R) against Gov. Charlie Baker (R) in Massachusetts; Baker, who had some real weakness among Massachusetts Republicans despite his overall popularity, opted against seeking a third term last week. Additionally, the former president endorsed against another sitting governor, backing Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin (R) against Gov. Brad Little (R) in Idaho. Overall, a majority of the 15 GOP governors who are eligible or announced candidates for reelection next year face primary challenges, with additional prominent primary challengers emerging in Ohio, Texas, and elsewhere. Which environment — the primary one on the Republican side, and the general election one on the Democratic side — poses a greater threat to incumbents? While every year is different, history does show that incumbent governors are likelier to lose general elections than primaries, although the overall reelection rate for gubernatorial incumbents is still strong, particularly lately. Table 2 shows the incumbent renomination, general election, and overall success rates for governors who sought reelection since the end of World War II. This table was most recently updated by National Journal’s Mary Frances McGowan in her chapter on gubernatorial races in our book on the 2020 elections, A Return to Normalcy? (in case you need any holiday shopping ideas). Table 2: Success rate for incumbent governors, 1946-2020Source: A Return to Normalcy? The 2020 Election That (Almost) Broke America) As you can see at the bottom of the table, incumbent governors very rarely lose renomination: 94% who have sought to once again represent their party in the general election have succeeded. That number may actually understate the power of governors in primaries: over the last 40 years, only once (1994) has there been more than a single governor to lose renomination in any even-numbered gubernatorial election year. And for all of the focus on Republican primaries, it may be that if an incumbent governor loses a primary, it may be a Democrat who does. There are 2 incumbent Democratic governors, Kathy Hochul of New York and Dan McKee of Rhode Island, who were not elected in their own right: They took over after their predecessors left office, and both face credible primary challengers. The only sitting governor who lost a primary in 2018, Jeff Colyer (R-KS), was also an unelected incumbent. Meanwhile, incumbent governors who are renominated have won their elections at close to an 80% clip in the postwar era. Incumbents are going to be on the ballot in the lion’s share of the gubernatorial elections next year. Of 36 races being contested, as many as 28 could feature incumbents. If that many incumbents do ultimately run, that would be the second-highest number of incumbents running in more than a half-century, surpassed only by the 29 running in 2014. The high number of incumbents running could limit the number of seats that change hands, although the dueling political environments on both sides could contribute to more turnover than one might otherwise expect. Rating changesOnce Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin (R-VA) takes office in January, Republicans will control 28 of the 50 state governorships. History suggests they are well-positioned to have more come 2023: the president’s party often loses governorships in midterm years. In 19 midterm elections since the end of World War II, the president’s party has lost, on average, roughly 4 net governorships per election. In some recent cycles, gubernatorial turnover rates have not matched up to the congressional picture very well: Republicans lost 11 governorships in Richard Nixon’s 1970 midterm, a year in which they otherwise suffered only mild losses in the House and actually netted a Senate seat. In 1986, Republicans netted 8 governorships in Ronald Reagan’s second midterm even as they lost 8 Senate seats, and their Senate majority, that same year. So the circumstances of the election matter quite a bit, and the amount of change (or lack of change) has hardly been consistent over time. Interestingly, and even though they could very well be victimized by the usual midterm curse, the Democrats currently have the two best offensive opportunities on the gubernatorial board so far. Following Baker’s retirement in Massachusetts, we moved that race from Likely Republican all the way to Likely Democratic. We explained that change last week — to make a long story short, we don’t expect the GOP nominee to have much crossover appeal, and we expect the Democratic nominee to be relatively strong, whoever it ends up being. Maryland, an open seat, is the other state governorship that we see as likeliest to switch parties, and the circumstances there are similar to Massachusetts, another deep blue state. This will be an open-seat race because popular incumbent Gov. Larry Hogan (R) is term-limited, and — just like in Massachusetts — former President Trump has endorsed a very conservative candidate, state Del. Dan Cox (R), for the GOP nomination over Kelly Schulz (R), a more Hogan-like candidate who serves in his administration as the state’s secretary of commerce. The Democratic field, meanwhile, is crowded but seems likely to produce a decent nominee. We’re moving this race from Leans Democratic to Likely Democratic. But while Democrats have the two best pickup opportunities, they are defending a lot of vulnerable turf. Our other 3 rating changes this week all push Democratic-held seats into more competitive categories. We’ll start in Nevada, a battleground state where Democrats enjoyed clear but small edges recently, winning statewide for president in 2016 and 2020 by a little under 2.5 points and winning the gubernatorial race by 4 points in 2018. Given the small margins in recent years, it wouldn’t take much for Republicans to flip the state. We switched Nevada’s Senate race from Leans Democratic to Toss-up in early November, and we’re going to make the same change for the gubernatorial race as Gov. Steve Sisolak (D-NV) seeks a second term. In 2018, the contested Senate and gubernatorial contests were very closely tied, as were the state’s presidential and Senate races in 2016 — another very straight-ticket outcome could be the case again in 2022. The lingering impact of COVID-19 paired with potential Democratic erosion among working-class voters of all stripes could be a particular problem in Nevada, a tourism-heavy, working-class state. Former Sen. Dean Heller (R-NV), who lost a bid for a second term in 2018, is the biggest name running, but he does not have a glide path to the nomination, as Clark County (Las Vegas) Sheriff Joe Lombardo (R) and others are running as well. We also are moving 2 other first-term governors in Biden-won states from Likely Democratic to Leans Democratic: Govs. Tim Walz (D-MN) and Michelle Lujan Grisham (D-NM). The former move, involving Walz, has more to do with the environment than anything else. The field to face him is very much uncertain, and it’s unclear whether the challenger who emerges against him will be strong. However, the broader environment is threatening to Walz, even as Republicans will need to find the right challenger to capitalize. Meanwhile, in the slightly more Democratic state of New Mexico, Republicans do appear to have a solid challenger to Lujan Grisham in 2020 U.S. Senate nominee Mark Ronchetti (R), a former television weather forecaster who got within half a dozen points of now-Sen. Ben Ray Lujan (D-NM) last year (there are other candidates, although he is the most notable). Lujan Grisham also has some vulnerabilities that Ronchetti may be able to exploit, although Democrats argue that Ronchetti may very well have peaked as an under-the-radar candidate in last year’s open-seat Senate race. In any event, Minnesota and New Mexico merit watching as sleeper races in the Leans Democratic column. Other races across the countryThough we’re not changing ratings in these states, there have been some other developments worth noting. Perhaps the contest that has heated up the most over the past week is Georgia’s. As last month was winding down, it seemed that Gov. Brian Kemp (R-GA) was slated to have only weak primary opposition, and it was unclear if his 2018 general election opponent, former state House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams (D), would even take the plunge despite being widely expected to run. But last week, Abrams indeed entered the race. While many Peach State political observers thought Abrams would eventually try for the governorship again, a more surprising development was the entrance of former Sen. David Perdue into the Republican primary on Monday. After being held below 50% in the 2020 general election, Perdue was forced into a runoff and lost to now-Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA). Though Kemp initially won in 2018 with the support of then-President Trump, the two Republicans have had a cooler relationship since. After 2020, Trump was angered as Kemp accepted then-candidate Biden’s victory in Georgia. The former president is thus backing Perdue. Absent the Trump-Kemp feud, the Georgia contest may look more like a Leans Republican race than a Toss-up. However, with the recent developments, we feel there is enough justification to keep the rating as it is, as Kemp has a very challenging race on his hands. A Fox 5 Atlanta/Insider Advantage poll from earlier this week gives Kemp a 41%-22% lead over Perdue. However, they were tied at 34% apiece after Perdue was identified as Trump’s choice. One would expect Trump to be very active in this race and to hold rallies on behalf of Perdue, which will help publicize his endorsement in advance of the May primary (and this race could very well go to a runoff). The primary winner will have a formidable general election opponent in Abrams, who likely will fire up both Democrats to vote for her and Republicans to vote against her. The specter of losing to Abrams could help bring the GOP back together following what could be a very bitterly contested primary. Next door, and though Alabama is Safe Republican, it will see another contest where a GOP incumbent is challenged by a more Trump-aligned challenger. Lindy Blanchard, the former president’s ambassador to Slovenia, was originally running for Senate but recently pivoted to the gubernatorial contest, joining some other challengers to Gov. Kay Ivey (R-AL), who is running for a second full term. Still, Ivey remains popular — earlier this week, her campaign deftly took to the air with an ad emphasizing her conservative record. Up north in Michigan, the emerging (and huge) Republican primary field still lacks a clear top-tier challenger to Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D-MI). Many Republicans were hoping that would be former Detroit Police Chief James Craig (R), but his campaign hasn’t taken off as of yet, and he and his campaign’s general consultant, veteran Republican operative John Yob, recently parted ways. Unlike the cast of Republicans lining up to challenge Walz, the GOP field against Whitmer doesn’t feature a single federal or state legislator, suggesting that the Michigan field is more unproven. Like many state executives, Whitmer’s approval ratings were high last year, but her numbers since have been more evenly split. The GOP’s 2018 and 2020 Senate nominee, John James, who finished within 2 points of Sen. Gary Peters (D-MI) last year, has reportedly considered the race. The environment could very well push this race into the Toss-up column anyway, but we’re going to hold Whitmer at Leans Democratic for now. Out west, Oregon has given every Democratic nominee for president a double-digit margin of victory since 2008, but its state-level races have often been much closer. Starting in 1986, Democrats have put together an impressive string of 10 gubernatorial victories there — but, with the exception of 1998, each contest was within single-digits. Because of this, the Crystal Ball started the cycle with Oregon rated as “only” Leans Democratic. Last month, polling from Morning Consult found that outgoing Democratic Gov. Kate Brown was the least popular governor in the country. Democrats have a competitive primary to succeed Brown, with state House Speaker Tina Kotek, state Treasurer Tobias Read, and former New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof the most prominent candidates as of now. Republicans, meanwhile, landed a credible candidate in former state House Minority Leader Christine Drazan, although their primary also includes Brown’s 2016 special election opponent, Bud Pierce (R), and some lesser-known names. Looking to the general election, something of an X-factor will be how many votes state Sen. Betsy Johnson, a Democratic legislator who is running as an independent, can pull. Johnson’s fundraising has not been trivial, and she was recently endorsed by Knute Buehler, the Republicans’ 2018 gubernatorial nominee who recently left the party. Though we still consider Democrats the favorites to hold the governorship, there seem to be some ingredients present for a possible Republican flip. As we saw in Virginia last month, when the GOP won statewide for the first time in a dozen years, many electoral streaks eventually end at some point. One streak that looks likely to continue next year, though, is Republicans’ hold on Texas. Like Abrams, former Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D, TX-16) got close in a 2018 general election contest, and is trying for statewide office again. In O’Rourke’s case, he’ll be switching from a senatorial race to a gubernatorial one. Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, however, is not quite as polarizing as Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), O’Rourke’s last opponent, and is a clear favorite for renomination despite attracting significant primary opposition. A Wednesday poll from Quinnipiac University showed Abbott up 52%-37% on O’Rourke. O’Rourke was probably Democrats’ best recruit, but he may have a hard time recreating the energy he had in 2018 in what is almost certainly not going to be as good of a political environment for Democrats. ConclusionToday’s rating changes clarify that Democrats have the 2 clearest gubernatorial pickup opportunities: the open seats in Maryland and Massachusetts. Republicans also are defending a couple of races in the Toss-up column, the open seat in Arizona as well as Kemp’s bid for a second term in Georgia. Meanwhile, Democrats are defending an open, Toss-up seat in Pennsylvania as well as the Toss-up reelection bids of Sisolak in Nevada and Govs. Laura Kelly (D-KS) and Tony Evers (D-WI). But there’s also a large group of 5 Democratic-held governorships in the Leans Democratic column — Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico, and Oregon — while there are no Republican-held seats rated as Leans Republican (all of the other current GOP states are rated as either Likely or Safe Republican). We’ve loaded up the Leans Democratic column on purpose: We wanted to illustrate how things could really go haywire for Democrats in a bad environment, but also to illustrate that Republicans have work to do in order to create more Toss-ups. For Republicans, the more immediate focus is helping their incumbents navigate primaries, as well as sorting out large fields of challengers in some key targeted states. After the primary season, there are a lot of attractive pickup opportunities for the GOP, and the potential is there for Republicans to have a big cycle. For Democrats, it’s more about helping incumbents steel themselves against what very well could be a difficult cycle — and also capitalizing on what are some golden offensive opportunities even amidst a challenging environment. |
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Explaining the Republican Victory in the Virginia Gubernatorial Election: Conversion or Mobilization? | |||||||||||||||
By Alan I. Abramowitz Senior Columnist, Sabato’s Crystal Ball |
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— The non-presidential party often performs better in off-year elections than it did in the previous cycle’s presidential race. The recent Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial races are no exception, both this year and historically. — This likely has more to do with an enthusiasm advantage generating better turnout for the non-presidential party than that party’s ability to attract considerable numbers of voters who supported the presidential party in the most recent presidential race. — Based on exit polls, the Virginia electorate in 2021 was markedly more Republican-leaning than the 2020 presidential electorate. Conversion vs. mobilization in 2021Republican Glenn Youngkin’s victory in the 2021 Virginia gubernatorial election along with the surprisingly narrow win by Democratic incumbent Phil Murphy in the New Jersey gubernatorial contest shocked many observers of American politics. Both states had strongly supported Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election, New Jersey by 16 points and Virginia by 10 points. The results of these two high-profile off-year elections have led to speculation that some key voting groups such as college-educated suburbanites that had swung Democratic in 2020 out of opposition to Donald Trump were swinging back to Republicans — a shift that could bode well for Republican prospects in the 2022 midterm elections. The assumption underlying such analyses of the 2021 contests is that most of the shift between 2020 and 2021 was due to conversion: 2020 Democratic voters moving into the GOP column in 2021. There is another possible explanation for Republican gains in 2021, however — disproportionate partisan mobilization. According to the partisan mobilization hypothesis, off-year elections often produce a shift in turnout in favor of the party that does not control the White House. While turnout drops for supporters of both parties compared to a presidential election year, out-party voters are more motivated to turn out to express their discontent with the leadership of the newly elected or reelected president. The mobilization hypothesis provides an explanation for the familiar pattern of midterm election gains for the out-party in the U.S. House and Senate. It also provides an explanation for the pattern of results seen in Virginia and New Jersey’s off-year gubernatorial elections: Between 1981 and 2017, the out-party’s candidates won 17 out of 20 gubernatorial elections in these two states. In these 20 elections, the average shift in margin toward the out-party from the presidential election to the following year’s gubernatorial election was 16 points in Virginia and 12 points in New Jersey — very similar to the shifts of 12 points in Virginia and 13 points in New Jersey between 2020 and 2021. In this article, I will take advantage of exit poll data from the 2021 Virginia gubernatorial election (there was no exit poll in New Jersey) to examine the sources of the swing toward the GOP in that contest.[1] These exit poll results — though imperfect, just like any other survey — allow us to estimate the proportion of 2020 Biden and Trump voters who shifted parties in 2021 and the impact of changes in the demographic composition of the electorate between the two elections. Before turning to the exit poll results, it is important to note that there was a remarkable degree of continuity in the results of the 2020 and 2021 elections in Virginia. Figure 1 displays a scatterplot of Virginia Democratic gubernatorial nominee Terry McAuliffe’s vote share by Biden’s major party vote share across all 133 Virginia cities and counties. The results show that there was a correlation of .996, very close to the maximum possible value of 1.0, between Biden’s vote share and McAuliffe’s vote share. In other words, Biden’s vote share almost perfectly predicted McAuliffe’s vote share. McAuliffe lost because he consistently ran between 1 and 9 points behind Biden’s vote share. In 56% of Virginia cities and counties, McAuliffe ran between 4 and 6 points behind Biden (or 8 to 12 points in terms of margin). A scatterplot of the New Jersey results shows a very similar pattern. What this tells us is that the voting patterns in both elections were highly nationalized: gubernatorial voting patterns followed presidential voting patterns very closely. Figure 1: McAuliffe 2021 vote share by Biden 2020 vote share in Virginia cities and countiesThe question raised by the data in Figure 1 is why McAuliffe consistently ran behind Biden across Virginia’s cities and counties. The answer, based on the Virginia exit poll data, is disproportionate partisan mobilization rather than conversion. Ninety-two percent of 2021 Virginia voters reported supporting either Donald Trump or Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election and very few switched parties in the gubernatorial election. Ninety-eight percent of Trump voters reported supporting Youngkin while 95% of Biden voters reported supporting McAuliffe. The shift of 5% of Biden voters to Youngkin versus 2% of Trump voters to McAuliffe would only account for a small fraction of the overall shift in results between 2020 and 2021. The vast majority of the shift in results was explained by disproportionate partisan mobilization. Simply put, 2020 Trump supporters were overrepresented and 2020 Biden supporters were underrepresented in the 2021 Virginia electorate. Thus, among respondents in the 2021 exit poll, 48% reported voting for Joe Biden while 44% reported voting for Donald Trump in 2020. Biden’s margin of 4 points among these voters compares with his margin of just over 10 points in the presidential election. Table 1: Comparing the 2020 and 2021 Virginia electoratesThe reasons for the Republican tilt of the 2021 Virginia electorate are clear in Table 1, which compares the demographic characteristics and candidate preferences of the 2020 and 2021 Virginia electorates based on exit poll data from the two elections. The data in this table show that the 2021 Virginia electorate was substantially older, Whiter, and more rural than the 2020 Virginia electorate. The most dramatic difference between the 2020 and 2021 electorates involved their age distribution. Not only were the 2021 voters considerably older, but those young voters who did turn out in 2021 were far more Republican in their preferences than the much larger group that turned out in 2020. The data in Table 1 show that the 2021 electorate was also considerably Whiter than the 2020 electorate. In addition, White voters who turned out in 2021 were considerably more Republican than those who turned out for the presidential election. There is less evidence here of any swing toward Republicans among nonwhites although the results for Latinos and Asians should be viewed with considerable caution due to the relatively small numbers of Latino and Asian respondents in these surveys. Discussion and conclusionsThe results of the 2021 gubernatorial elections in Virginia and New Jersey showed a strong swing toward the Republican Party. A 16-point Democratic margin in New Jersey in 2020 turned into a 3-point Democratic margin in 2021 and a 10-point Democratic margin in Virginia in 2020 turned into a 2-point Republican margin in 2021. However, county-level data show that voting patterns in the gubernatorial elections were very similar to those in the presidential election while exit poll data from Virginia show that very few Biden voters actually switched sides in the 2021 gubernatorial election. Instead, it appears that the shift in election results between 2020 and 2021 was due largely to disproportionate partisan mobilization — stronger turnout among Republican voters than among Democratic voters in the off-year elections. Republicans won in Virginia and came surprisingly close to winning in New Jersey because Republican voters were more energized than Democratic voters. In the California recall election, in contrast, Republicans apparently did not enjoy a major advantage in turnout and the GOP-sponsored recall effort fell flat. These results suggest that the results of the 2022 midterm elections will depend primarily on the ability of Republican and Democratic candidates to mobilize their own party’s supporters more than their ability to convert supporters of the opposing party. Footnote[1] In this analysis, I am using results from Edison Research Exit polls conducted for a consortium of media outlets. There was a separate exit poll in 2021 conducted by the Associated Press and Fox News. However, I was unable to obtain detailed crosstabs for the 2021 gubernatorial vote for the AP/Fox News Poll.
Read the fine printLearn more about the Crystal Ball and find out how to contact us here. Sign up to receive Crystal Ball e-mails like this one delivered straight to your inbox. Use caution with Sabato’s Crystal Ball, and remember: “He who lives by the Crystal Ball ends up eating ground glass!” |
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38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
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40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) WORLD NET DAILY
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43.) REDSTATE
Biden’s Remarks in Kansas City Are a Complete Acid Bath
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44.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
45.) MSNBC
December 9, 2021 THE LATEST Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., tweeted a photo of his heavily armed family, including children, posed before the family Christmas tree days after a 15-year-old reportedly carried out America’s worst school shooting in years. Rep. Lauren Boebert later tweeted a similar photo.
The photos weren’t just insensitive, Zeeshan Aleem writes. “They were bold political and cultural statements. The style of the guns, their size, the number of them and the fact that they were being held by young children displayed a disturbing vision of family and safety embraced by some quarters of the right.”
Read Zeeshan Aleem’s full analysis on your Thursday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Anti-vaxxers are now melding with anti-democratic extremists. Read More Psaki’s snark about Covid tests was not a good look. Read More China’s condemnation of sports-related protests draws from American officials’ playbooks. Read More Under the hypothetical, Trump could start exacting revenge against those who defeated him. 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 newest episode, the Boyland family’s questions about Rosanne’s radicalization revolve around the man she traveled with to the Capitol, who has since vanished. Ayman speaks with the last journalist to interview him before he disappeared. 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,” tomorrow at 10 p.m. ET.
Follow MSNBC
Check out the MSNBC channel on Apple News
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Today we look at the problem of untraceable “ghost guns” featured on YouTube, the latest showdown over vaccine mandates, and controversy at an unusual beauty contest.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Thursday morning. The internet has made the proliferation of homemade weapons a vexing problem for law enforcement officials across the country, who have linked them to mass shootings, attacks on police, as well as drug and gang-related killings in recent years.
And now, more than three years after YouTube tightened its gun content restrictions, an NBC News review has found dozens of videos, with more than 4.6 million combined views, showing how to assemble “ghost guns,” which remain largely unregulated in most states and are nearly impossible to trace because they lack serial numbers.
NBC News sent links to six videos — which combined accounted for more than 1.2 million hits — to YouTube’s parent company, Google, seeking comment on how it enforces its firearms policy.
YouTube removed the videos within hours but dozens of similar videos remain on the site.
Read the full story here. Friday’s Top Stories
The Senate passed a resolution Wednesday to repeal President Joe Biden’s vaccination-or-testing mandate for private-sector employers in a bipartisan rebuke of a key component of the White House’s Covid-19 strategy. U.S. travel warnings are hitting longtime American tourist hot spots where it hurts, with some who depend on the dollar describing their situation as desperate. Researchers are finding that the intersection of Google, smartphones and our memories is starting to mess with how we judge our own abilities. OPINION The governor is leading GOP efforts to create environments conducive to authoritarianism, writes Ruth Ben-Ghiat, author of “Strongmen: From Mussolini to the Present.” Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
What motivates people to go to the gym more often? Emails, text messages and really small cash rewards. Select
The Amazon Halo View fitness tracker is built with multiple sensors to provide health insights like heart rate and blood oxygen levels: Here’s everything we know about it. One Fun Thing
Controversy at beauty contests is nothing new. But the contestants are usually people, not camels.
More than 40 camels were disqualified from an annual camel beauty pageant in Saudi Arabia after an investigation found they had been given Botox and other artificial treatments, the state-run Saudi Press Agency reported Wednesday.
The popular King Abdulaziz Camel Festival, which kicked off earlier this month, invites the breeders of the most beautiful camels to compete for some $66 million in prize money.
Read more here.
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: patrick.smith@nbcuni.com.
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49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: As Biden promotes democracy abroad, the home front should worry him the most
President Biden this morning kicked off a virtual “Summit for Democracy” – to promote democracy around the world.
But that message is undercut by the growing democracy problem at home that’s coming from the party and former president he defeated a year ago.
David Perdue, who’s challenging Republican Gov. Brian Kemp in Battleground Georgia, told Axios that he wouldn’t have certified Joe Biden’s victory in the Peach State if he had been governor.
“Not with the information that was available at the time and not with the information that has come out now. They had plenty of time to investigate this. And I wouldn’t have signed it until those things had been investigated, and that’s all we were asking for,” Perdue said.
Biden won Georgia by 11,779 votes. And don’t forget that Trump was telling Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger on Jan. 2: “I just want to find 11,780 votes.”
Speaking of Raffensperger, here’s Rep. Jody Hice, R-Ga., who’s running against him in a primary to be Georgia’s secretary of state: “I do not believe we had fair elections in Georgia,” Hice told The Atlantic.
And here’s the Republican frontrunner to be Arizona’s next governor, Kari Lake, when NBC’s Vaughn Hillyard asked her if she would have certified Joe Biden’s 10,000-vote victory in the state: “Hell no.”
Susan Walsh/AP
Maybe today’s “Summit for Democracy” is, in part, a sly Biden subtweet at the GOP and its growing list of Trump-fueled candidates in 2022.
“Here in the United States, we know as well as anyone that renewing our democracy and strengthening our democratic institutions requires constant effort,” Biden said today, per NBC’s Peter Alexander.
But how much constant effort is Biden going to devote to this growing problem at home?
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Perdue’s turn
David Perdue’s entire rationale for his candidacy – that Kemp certifying the 2020 election results in Georgia was a mistake and hurt the GOP – is perhaps the most worrisome development when it comes to the state of the U.S. democracy.
Perdue was never a backbench Freedom Caucus member; he was the former CEO of Reebok and Dollar General. He won election to the U.S. Senate BEFORE Trump’s presidency.
And he owes his Senate runoff defeat to Trump and his post-election conspiracies and controversies.
But Perdue now believes his best path back to political office is to promote the idea that Joe Biden didn’t really win in 2020.
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Biden’s polling slump continues
And here’s the thing: Perdue can win a general election in 2022. So can Lake in Arizona. Ditto Hice for Georgia secretary of state.
Especially if President Biden’s numbers don’t improve from where they are right now.
Just look at the national polls over the last couple of days:
- Monmouth has Biden’s job rating at 40 percent.
- The Wall Street Journal has him at 41 percent.
- NPR/Marist has it at 42 percent.
As we’ve pointed out before, these numbers are worse than Barack Obama’s in 2009-2010; they look more like Obama’s in 2013-2014.
And they’re not far off from where Trump’s numbers were in 2017-2018.
In all of those three cycles – 2010, 2014, 2018 – the party out of the White House made significant gains across the country.
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
3: The number of witnesses subpoenaed by the Jan. 6 committee who are pleading the Fifth, complicating the committee’s efforts.
15: How many tie-breaking votes Vice President Kamala Harris has cast, more than all but four other vice presidents.
$2.1 million: How much the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee announced it raised in November, per NBC’s Liz Brown-Kaiser, after a disappointing month for Democrats in the 2021 elections.
167,000: The estimated number of children in the U.S. who lost their parents or caregivers to Covid.
2: The number of Senate Democrats who joined with Republicans to vote to repeal the Biden administration’s test-or-vaccinate mandate on private sector employees (West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin and Montana Sen. Jon Tester).
49,561,992: The number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 149,944 more since yesterday morning.)
796,112: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,772 since yesterday morning.)
475,728,399: The number of total vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 2,485,171 since yesterday morning.)
48,896,346: The number of booster vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 1,029,726 since yesterday morning.)
60.4 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
71.8 percent: The share of all Americans 18-years and older who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
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Tweet of the Day: Honoring Bob Dole
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North Carolina moves its primaries to May 17
Yesterday we previewed the GOP’s big NC-SEN set for March 8.
But it turns out that primary – as well as the state’s other ones – will be held on May 17 instead.
“North Carolina’s highest court on Wednesday pushed back the March election primaries for all legislative, congressional and judicial seats to give state courts time to review lawsuits claiming that the Republican-controlled legislature illegally gerrymandered some districts,” the AP writes.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world
The White House is considering heavy sanctions on Russia if it attacks Ukraine.
The FDA has granted an emergency authorization for an injection aimed at preventing Covid-19 among immunocompromised people.
The Biden administration plans to award three Medals of Honor to servicemembers who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Virginia’s draft congressional map could leave Democratic Rep. Abigail Spanberger in a tough spot.
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50.) CBS
51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Elon Musk has been sharing nuggets of based wisdom on Twitter, less than 280 characters at a time, for a few months. He also mocked a sitting United States Senator for looking like he ejaculated all o … MORE |
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
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60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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73.) POPULIST PRESS
John Durham just pushed back against Hillary’s team, that former FBI General Counsel James Baker undermined the special counsel’s false statements indictment against the Democratic lawyer
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TOP STORIES:
-
John Durham Just Came Out Swinging Against Hillary’s Team…
- SCOTUS COMMISSION JUST VOTED ON TERM LIMITS
-
Gaetz In Talks With Trump About Full Takeover….
-
Mike Pence Aide Just Flipped On Trump, Exposing Worst Fears…
-
Trump Supporter Hands Cashier $20, Cops Called When He Sees Back
-
Lin Wood Loses It — Suffers Psychotic Public Meltdown
-
Bannon Just Flipped The Script On DOJ… Entire Case Delegitimized
- Human rights organization busted spreading fake Steve Bannon posts
- ‘Corrupt Piece of Sh*t’: Rittenhouse Prosecutor Gets Bad News
- Liz Cheney Just Got Worst News Of Her Career After Backstabbing Trump
- DOJ Doubling Down On Steve Bannon…
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IN DEPTH:
|
- BREAKING: California to become ‘sanctuary state’ for abortions 26 mins ago
- Top Republican Calls for Investigation into Hunter Biden 46 mins ago
- Zuckerberg-Backed Election Influence Group Founder Served with CCP 1 hour ago
- Fauci: Fully Vaccinated Will Mean Three Shots 1 hour ago
- 4.2M workers quit jobs in October, third-highest number on record 2 hours ago
- Biden: US troops in Ukraine ‘not on the table’ to deter Russia 2 hours ago
- HarperCollins Cancels Chris Cuomo’s Book 2 hours ago
- COVID Hospitalization Rates Increase Mostly in Blue States… 2 hours ago
-
House Votes to Approve Bill Setting Up Process to Raise Debt Ceiling 3 hours ago
-
Nancy Pelosi Career Bombshell… End Of The Line?
-
Left-Wing Media Gets Destroyed By Trump Over False Claims About Melania 23 mins ago
- Biden Commission Has No Objection To Court Packing…. 1 hour ago
- (LIVE UPDATES) Day 8 of Ghislaine Maxwell Trial Underway 1 hour ago
- Attempt to recall Seattle City Councilmember Kshama Sawant passing in early results 1 hour ago
- Young Democrats more likely to despise the other party 2 hours ago
- House Passes Defense Bill… 2 hours ago
- One arrest after Fox News Christmas tree set on fire… 2 hours ago
- Jussie Smollett’s testimony was ‘unparalleled disaster… 2 hours ago
- Border Patrol Facilities in Yuma at 800% COVID-19 Capacity 2 hours ago
- French Youth Are Following In The Footsteps of Trump’s MAGA Movement 2 hours ago
- China Military Spending Surge… 2 hours ago
- St. Paul Scrambling to Amend the City’s Harmful Rent Control Law… 2 hours ago
- Spending Freeze Puts a Deep Chill On US Military Modernization 2 hours ago
- Fortenberry Targeted In Case From Troubled DoJ 2 hours ago
- Biden Warns Putin Taking Military Action against Ukraine… 2 hours ago
- A Preview of How Japan and America Would Fight China? 2 hours ago
- How U.S. Allies and Friends Are Helping Fund China’s New Aircraft Carrier 2 hours ago
- Fauci Admits Africa Travel Ban Was Passed “in the Dark” 2 hours ago
- Suspected killer of Saudi journalist Khashoggi arrested… 2 hours ago
- CAIR Declares U.S. Jewish Groups, Synagogues ‘Enemies’ 2 hours ago
- Infection Rates Climbing, Sweden Reimposes Many COVID-19 Measures 2 hours ago
- Newsom leaves California amid crime crisis for book tour 2 hours ago
- Cruz: Go to 2022 Olympics and ‘Highlight China’s Oppression’ 2 hours ago
- Jan. 6 committee vows contempt charges on Mark Meadows 3 hours ago
- America Should Be Shining the Light of Liberty, Not Government 3 hours ago
- Biden’s Dollar Store Debacle 3 hours ago
- Will Congress Take Away Your Credit Card? 3 hours ago
- Is the Rift Between the Public and the C-Suites Permanent? 3 hours ago
- White House: Ukraine ‘is not a comparable situation’ to Afghanistan 3 hours ago
- MTG Releases Report on Treatment of Jan 6 Defendants 3 hours ago
- Kimmel, Colbert, Fallon Ratings Plummet 4th month straight 3 hours ago
- Prince Harry Shows His Privilege… 3 hours ago
- US is ‘preparing for all contingencies’ with Russia, Ukraine 3 hours ago
- Hundreds Of Local Papers Are Suing Facebook And Google For Ad Monopolies 3 hours ago
- Why Enes Kanter Freedom is proud to be American … 3 hours ago
- Visa Launches Cryptocurrency Consulting Services 3 hours ago
- Apartment Rent and Occupancy Hit Record Highs 3 hours ago
- Biden Plan to Combat Corruption… 3 hours ago
- Lawmakers call for investigation into proposed AT&T WarnerMedia, Discovery merger 3 hours ago
- Productivity Crashes More Than Expected, Worst Since 1960 3 hours ago
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TOP STORIES:
-
Mike Pence Aide Just Flipped On Trump, Exposing Worst Fears…
-
Rittenhouse Makes Big Announcement about His Future…
- Roger Stone…”Im Pleading The 5th”
-
Mark Meadows Is Done With Pelosi… Files Lawsuit…
- DeSantis Makes Major Vow To Florida…
- Bannon Makes Good On ‘Misdemeanor From Hell’ Promise For AG Garland
-
John Durham Just Came Out Swinging Against Hillary’s Team…
- Big Win For Republicans In Major Blue State
- SCOTUS COMMISSION JUST VOTED ON TERM LIMITS
-
Gaetz In Talks With Trump About Full Takeover….
- Democrat Senator Suddenly Quits Party… Cites ‘Unconstitutional Acts’
-
Mike Pence Aide Just Flipped On Trump, Exposing Worst Fears…
- Trump Supporter Hands Cashier $20, Cops Called When He Sees Back
-
Lin Wood Loses It — Suffers Psychotic Public Meltdown
- Bannon Just Flipped The Script On DOJ… Entire Case Delegitimized
- Human rights organization busted spreading fake Steve Bannon posts
|
IN DEPTH:
|
- CNN gushes over gas prices falling to $3.35 a gallon: ‘A big economic relief for millions’ 3 hours ago
- BREAKING: Twitter suspends Ghislaine Maxwell trial tracker account 3 hours ago
- Jussie Smollett trial kicks off jury deliberation: LIVE UPDATES 3 hours ago
- Pathetic Hillary Clinton Sobs On Live Tv… 3 hours ago
- House Approves $778B Defense Bill 4 hours ago
- BREAKING: California to become ‘sanctuary state’ for abortions 26 mins ago
- Top Republican Calls for Investigation into Hunter Biden 46 mins ago
- Zuckerberg-Backed Election Influence Group Founder Served with CCP 1 hour ago
- Fauci: Fully Vaccinated Will Mean Three Shots 1 hour ago
- 4.2M workers quit jobs in October, third-highest number on record 2 hours ago
- Biden: US troops in Ukraine ‘not on the table’ to deter Russia 2 hours ago
- HarperCollins Cancels Chris Cuomo’s Book 2 hours ago
- COVID Hospitalization Rates Increase Mostly in Blue States… 2 hours ago
-
House Votes to Approve Bill Setting Up Process to Raise Debt Ceiling 3 hours ago
-
Nancy Pelosi Career Bombshell… End Of The Line?
-
Left-Wing Media Gets Destroyed By Trump Over False Claims About Melania 23 mins ago
- Biden Commission Has No Objection To Court Packing…. 1 hour ago
- (LIVE UPDATES) Day 8 of Ghislaine Maxwell Trial Underway 1 hour ago
- Attempt to recall Seattle City Councilmember Kshama Sawant passing in early results 1 hour ago
- Young Democrats more likely to despise the other party 2 hours ago
- House Passes Defense Bill… 2 hours ago
- One arrest after Fox News Christmas tree set on fire… 2 hours ago
- Jussie Smollett’s testimony was ‘unparalleled disaster… 2 hours ago
- Border Patrol Facilities in Yuma at 800% COVID-19 Capacity 2 hours ago
- French Youth Are Following In The Footsteps of Trump’s MAGA Movement 2 hours ago
- China Military Spending Surge… 2 hours ago
- St. Paul Scrambling to Amend the City’s Harmful Rent Control Law… 2 hours ago
- Spending Freeze Puts a Deep Chill On US Military Modernization 2 hours ago
- Fortenberry Targeted In Case From Troubled DoJ 2 hours ago
- Biden Warns Putin Taking Military Action against Ukraine… 2 hours ago
- A Preview of How Japan and America Would Fight China? 2 hours ago
- How U.S. Allies and Friends Are Helping Fund China’s New Aircraft Carrier 2 hours ago
- Fauci Admits Africa Travel Ban Was Passed “in the Dark” 2 hours ago
- Suspected killer of Saudi journalist Khashoggi arrested… 2 hours ago
- CAIR Declares U.S. Jewish Groups, Synagogues ‘Enemies’ 2 hours ago
- Infection Rates Climbing, Sweden Reimposes Many COVID-19 Measures 2 hours ago
- Newsom leaves California amid crime crisis for book tour 2 hours ago
- Cruz: Go to 2022 Olympics and ‘Highlight China’s Oppression’ 2 hours ago
- Jan. 6 committee vows contempt charges on Mark Meadows 3 hours ago
- America Should Be Shining the Light of Liberty, Not Government 3 hours ago
- Biden’s Dollar Store Debacle 3 hours ago
- Will Congress Take Away Your Credit Card? 3 hours ago
- Is the Rift Between the Public and the C-Suites Permanent? 3 hours ago
- White House: Ukraine ‘is not a comparable situation’ to Afghanistan 3 hours ago
- MTG Releases Report on Treatment of Jan 6 Defendants 3 hours ago
- Kimmel, Colbert, Fallon Ratings Plummet 4th month straight 3 hours ago
- Prince Harry Shows His Privilege… 3 hours ago
- US is ‘preparing for all contingencies’ with Russia, Ukraine 3 hours ago
- Hundreds Of Local Papers Are Suing Facebook And Google For Ad Monopolies 3 hours ago
- Why Enes Kanter Freedom is proud to be American … 3 hours ago
- Visa Launches Cryptocurrency Consulting Services 3 hours ago
- Apartment Rent and Occupancy Hit Record Highs 3 hours ago
- Biden Plan to Combat Corruption… 3 hours ago
- Lawmakers call for investigation into proposed AT&T WarnerMedia, Discovery merger 3 hours ago
- Productivity Crashes More Than Expected, Worst Since 1960 3 hours ago
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74.) THE POST MILLENNIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Did a friend forward this? Subscribe here. Welcome to the Thursday edition of Internet Insider, where we explore identities online and off. TODAY:
BREAK THE INTERNET A viral TikTok video shows a TikToker saying he was fired from Domino’s Pizza in Ottawa for a viral “dabke” dance video. Now even Taco Bell is defending him and his friend.
@rassayrr recently re-posted a video of him and a co-worker doing a circle dance, called dabke, while in uniform at an Ottawa-area Domino’s Pizza. The newer video has over 22 million views.
In the re-post, he attached overlay text reading, “Dominos commented on our video, but they didn’t know we got fired for it.” The caption says, “We miss u.”
Domino’s Canada division commented on the dance in the original video, which has over 17.2 million views: “Killed it.” One woman stated, “I’m not even Arab, but I wanna join in.”
The re-post features more corporations’ social media giving the dancers their props. Taco Bell Canada wrote, “First priority is vibes.” Just Salad commented, “They don’t deserve ya.” One writer told Domino’s to “rehire these men.”
One influencer stated the corporations could not properly leverage social. Jesse J. Pedigo wrote: “I don’t think businesses know how useful TikTok can be for business yet. Times are changing.”
Read the whole story here. By Kahron Spearman Contributing Writer SPONSORED Traditional wallets don’t do a whole lot. But The Ridge Wallet? That’s another story. Their RFID-blocking wallets protect your cards, come in virtually indestructible materials like carbon fiber and titanium, and they’re 60% slimmer than traditional wallets.
And with the holidays coming in hot, The Ridge Gift Guide offers up to 40% off favorites and new releases. Give those on your list—and yourself—the perfect gift this year. Use code HOLIDAY15 for an additional 15% off sitewide. UNDER ATTACK The owner of a small business that sells vintage eyewear has taken to TikTok to share her experience with “online hitmen” who are allegedly ruining her six-figure business.
Kaila Uli (@kailauli) the owner of Brillies eyewear, said her website had been cloned, and her revenue had sharply decreased. Her video has received 1.8 million views since it was posted Nov. 29.
“I knew something was wrong when I logged into my Facebook Ad manager and I saw 83 websites connected to my pixel (Facebook’s ad tracker),” Uli said. “I started looking at the links and they were all exact clone copies of my site. Then suddenly my traffic disappeared.”
Described by @viliamufanene, what Uli is experiencing is called a denial-of-service attack, or a DDoS attack. Her site is still safe to purchase from, but through the creation of traffic disruptions, attackers are preventing users from accessing her web page.
It appears viewers are trying to help Uli save her business. In a follow-up video, she said she’s been put in touch with information technology (IT) and cybersecurity workers.
Read the whole story here.
—Brooke Sjoberg
DAILY DOT PICKS
CYBERSCOPES Ready to go on an adventure? Sagittarius season is here to broaden your mental, spiritual, and physical horizons.
Ascending from the depths of Scorpio season, the fiery archer is ready to meet you outside the gates of the underworld. Travel light because this centaur waits for no one and the itinerary is packed.
Ruled by Jupiter, the third and final fire sign of the zodiac is associated with expansion, luck, freedom, and exploration. Known as the cosmic archer, Sagittarius is the only sign of the zodiac armed with an external weapon—an arrow pointed toward the heavens, symbolizing the quest for higher knowledge, taking aim or ambition, directness, and hitting the mark.
In tarot, Sagittarius is associated with the 14th card of the major arcana, Temperance. The card depicts an angel with one foot in a stream and one foot on land as they slowly pour liquid from one golden cup into another in a process called “tempering.” This month challenges us to evolve by “tempering” our ambitions, new explorations, and the unknown with who we are in the present moment.
Read your full horoscope here.
—Royal Sumikat
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77.) HEADLINE USA
78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Thursday 12.09.21 America is definitely hiring. Job openings jumped unexpectedly in October to about 11 million, with the leisure and hospitality industries — particularly hotels and food services — seeing the biggest increase in open positions. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. A Covid-19 testing site set up along Fifth Avenue in New York City earlier this month. Coronavirus
Three states have called on the National Guard to help alleviate health systems overwhelmed by rising Covid-19 cases. The New York National Guard has deployed 120 medics to help overtaxed long-term care facilities, and more may be sent to hospitals as well. Maine made a similar decision as it reported a record high number of Covid-19 hospitalizations yesterday. In New Hampshire, Gov. Christopher Sununu is asking both FEMA and the National Guard to help the state prepare for a winter surge. Even as states make plans, a new study shows the world at large is not prepared for the next pandemic. Not a single country scored well on the Global Health Security Index — a measure of preparedness for various health emergencies and problems put together by the Nuclear Threat Initiative and the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security at the Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Voting rights
Voting rights advocates are sounding alarm bells over a spate of recent redistricting plans across the country that they say could disenfranchise voters of color and underrepresented communities. The North Carolina Supreme Court just delayed the state’s primary elections — now set to take place in May 2022 — due to lawsuits over congressional and state legislative district maps. The groups behind the lawsuits claim the maps are gerrymandering attempts that violate the state constitution. Earlier this week, the Justice Department filed a lawsuit alleging that Texas’ new congressional map illegally discriminates against Hispanic and Black voters. Voting activists in Georgia are preparing for a similar fight as a Republican-backed bill redrawing some district lines could be advanced in the Georgia General Assembly next year.
Ukraine
The final elements of a $60 million security assistance package from the US, including small arms, ammo, missiles and nonlethal elements, will arrive in Ukraine this week. So far this year, the US has delivered about $450 million in security assistance to Ukraine, and the Pentagon has also been sending troops abroad to help train the country’s military. All of this comes as Ukraine and its allies brace for possible aggression from Russia. A new security assessment from Ukrainian defense officials says Russia has increased the number of troops near the Ukrainian border to 120,000. The Biden administration is also preparing possible sanctions on Russia if it moves to invade Ukraine. However, energy sanctions likely won’t be on the table due to the impact such a move would have on global markets. Social media
Instagram head Adam Mosseri testified during a Senate subcommittee hearing yesterday about the platform’s potentially harmful impact on younger users. Mosseri is the the most high-profile figure from Meta (formerly Facebook) to testify before Congress since a Facebook whistleblower leaked hundreds of internal documents earlier this year. Mosseri said Instagram is planning to bring back a chronological feed next year, supplanting an algorithmic feed that some worry can send users down damaging rabbit holes of content. He also acknowledged the need for updated regulations to keep people safe online, but did not comment on the possibility of a regulatory body not led by members of Big Tech. Meanwhile, a tech advocacy group claims Instagram is rife with accounts advertising the sale of Xanax, ecstasy, opioids and other drugs, creating an easily-accessible “drug pipeline” for young people. UK
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson and members of his administration are embroiled in a thorny controversy concerning claims that two social events were held inside 10 Downing Street in the days leading up to Christmas 2020 — in violation of the country’s strict pandemic restrictions at the time. The scandal reached a head when a video emerged this week that appears to show officials joking about the parties during a rehearsal for televised press briefings. In response, Johnson announced an internal inquiry, and one of the officials in the video — the prime minister’s former spokeswoman Allegra Stratton, resigned as a government adviser yesterday. Aside from the appearance of government hypocrisy, the video and other evidence of the gatherings undermine the UK government’s current efforts to introduce tougher Covid-19 restrictions. Sponsor Content by The Ridge Wallet The Smartest Way to Carry Your Cash & Cards The Ridge Wallet has been helping people ditch their bulky leather bi-folds for years. This well-built, minimalist, RFID-blocking wallet is a slim, front pocket wallet option. Take 15% off today with code HOLIDAY15.
People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Lego is building new factory in Vietnam to keep up with growing demand in Asia
Pantone unveils ‘Very Peri’ as its Color of the Year for 2022
How ‘chicken cannons’ are used to keep planes safe from bird strikes
Real Christmas trees may be better for your mental health than fake ones
Rocketing 300 mph through the skies with nothing but a parachute: Welcome to speed skydiving 293 That’s how many journalists were imprisoned in 2021, according to an annual census by nonprofit group Committee to Protect Journalists. It’s the highest number CPJ has reported since it started keeping track of the data in 1992. CPJ’s report also found at least 24 journalists were killed for their work, as of December 1. When somebody’s suffering from substance use disorder or going through an overdose, whether fatal or nonfatal, they’re not Republicans, they’re not Democrats. They’re not living in red states or blue states, or rich or poor, or black or white … they’re human beings that we need to help support.
Dr. Rahul Gupta, director of the White House’s Office of National Drug Control Policy, who says drug addiction should be treated like a chronic disease. Brought to you by CNN Underscored 33 gifts perfect for the person still working from home If you know someone still working from home (or if you yourself are still taking calls from bed), this holiday season is the perfect time to upgrade their setup so they can be more productive in their home office. Be raisinable Sponsor Content by LendingTree Rates Are Beginning To Rise. Refinance Before It Is Too Late Economists are urging Americans to refinance to take advantage of historically low refinance rates. These low rates are not going to last much longer.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
- The Week in Video: Remy, the BB, and Libertarian James Bond
- The Geek in Pictures: Delta-Omicron Edition
- Amputate this
- Mr. Socialist confesses…
The Week in Video: Remy, the BB, and Libertarian James Bond
Posted: 08 Dec 2021 12:44 PM PST (Steven Hayward)I’ve long resisted attempting a regular “Week in Video” feature to go along with Week and Geek in Pictures, but a few recent ones are worthy of sharing, and might as well do it as a bunch. First, good to see the Babylon Bee folks getting into video, with this entry on what liberals with kids named Brandon must be going through right now:
Next, I share the disappointment (or worse) with the latest James Bond film, and thus this entry from ReasonTV is a nice counterpoint:
And Remy is out with a new rap on raising the debt ceiling (again):
Enjoy! |
The Geek in Pictures: Delta-Omicron Edition
Posted: 08 Dec 2021 08:11 AM PST (Steven Hayward)Well if the WHO can run through the Greek alphabet for every new variation of the Wuhan flu, then why can’t we do the same with our occasional chart roundup? • Speaking of COVID and the games the “public health” community like the play, here’s a clinic about the use and abuse of the Y-axis: Meanwhile: I thought Germany knew how to do lockdowns. . . • Bubble blowing? Crash ahead? • Just Biden our time: Nice going, Democrats, on “sticking it to the rich”: Notice the only time this trendline dips down (too bad the series stops in 2015): Chaser: • Gee, I wonder why donations to the Clinton Foundation have fallen off so much? • Related: • Inflation of a different kind: • Energy: • Misc: And finally. . . |
Amputate this
Posted: 08 Dec 2021 07:56 AM PST (Scott Johnson)Students of ancient history may recall that the Associated Press was holed up in a Gaza high-rise building that Israeli intelligence identified as hosting Hamas assets and offices, unbeknownst to the news hounds using the building when the IDF bombed it during the hostilities last May. The AP story on the bombing vehemently denied that the AP knew anything, in the best Today the AP is blasting out Hamas propaganda from Gaza in the form of a story by Fares Akram: “New soccer league helps Gaza amputees cope with war trauma.” Struggling with how to do the story justice, I turned to Dominic Green, historian and editor of the Spectator World edition. Dominic comments: “The AP piece is very impressive: simultaneously subtle and striking as propaganda, and we’d never know that Israel led the world in amputee sports due to Palestinian terrorism. Well done, Fares!” Giving me permission to quote him with attribution, he adds that “this kind of piece should be exposed for what it is.” The AP itself is guilty of amputation. There’s something missing beside those limbs! |
Mr. Socialist confesses…
Posted: 08 Dec 2021 05:00 AM PST (Scott Johnson)This is a personal note about Garrison Keillor. I began listening to Keillor on Minnesota Public Radio while I was in law school. Garrison occupied the station’s three-hour morning slot five days a week with A Prairie Home Morning Show. I thought the show was so entertaining and funny that he would become a star. I learned a lot about American popular music listening to the show. The first time I ever heard Ella Fitzgerald’s version of “Miss Otis Regrets” was when Garrison played it. I also learned some American history. At this time of the year back in 1977 or 1978 Garrison read Daniel’s Boorstin’s take on the department store from his three-volume social history The Americans. I think it was excerpted from chapter 10 (“Consumers’ Palaces”), in Boorstin’s third volume (subtitled The Democratic Experience). It’s a book I never would have read were it not for Garrison’s morning show. After law school I moved away from the Twin Cities to work in St. Louis and lost track of Garrison’s radio career. I wasn’t surprised when he and his show went on to receive the national recognition I had thought they deserved. My friend Bruce Sanborn reviewed Garrison’s Lake Wobegon Days for the Claremont Review of Books in 1985. We saw Garrison around town, as Bruce notes in his review. Bruce persuaded me that I wasn’t missing anything as Garrison’s career prospered. We found his politics alienating. Eight or so years ago one of my kids asked us to take her and a guest to see Garrison’s live broadcast of A Prairie Home Companion from the Minnesota State Fair. Garrison was great. Garrison’s deadpan interview with the judge of the butter sculpture competition was hilarious. The music was excellent. Even his Lake Wobegon monologue was entertaining. Garrison became big business. He must have made a fortune working the Prairie Home Companion line. If Boorstin were still around, he could update Part Two (“Consumption Communities”) of that third volume of The Americans with a profile of Garrison, Minnesota Public Radio, American Public Radio (the company MPR set up to distribute A Prairie Home Companion), and Garrison’s fans. When Garrison became a victim of the MeToo movement in 2017 I felt bad for him. I started patronizing his bookstore on Snelling Avenue in St. Paul (since sold). In February 2020, just before the the Covid shutdown, I went to see his beautiful show with Heather Masse of the Wailin’ Jennys. I snapped the photo above from our seat in front of the stage. Heather didn’t seem too put off by the sexual harassment thing either. My old friend Rich Dworsky was Garrison’s long-time musical director. Rich accompanied Garrison and Heather for the show. Below is a video of Garrison singing Ann Reed’s “If You Were Mine” with Heather Masse accompanied by Rich Dworsky and the band in 2016.
Garrison writes a weekly column that is carried by Binyamin Jokolvsky at Jewish World Review. Garrison has moved to Manhattan. I find his columns funny. Binyamin tells me that he also finds the columns funny and that Garrison has a lot of New York fans. Garrison’s column this week is “Mr. Socialist confesses.” I think the column sends up the Minnesota state of mind. If it’s possible to shove a state of mind down your throat, it’s shoved down our throat every day in the Twin Cities. If a state of mind can be in the air we breathe, it’s in the air that we breathe. If air can suffocate, the air is suffocating. Garrison himself doesn’t confess to seeing the column exactly that way. At his site he titles the column “Mr. Socialist confesses a love of opera.” Read between the lines to see if you think his confession is limited to a love of opera. |
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
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86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
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93.) JUST THE NEWS
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94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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96.) NOT THE BEE
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Not the Bee Daily Newsletter |
Dec 9, 2021 |
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Sponsored By: 4Patriots
So a “potentially hazardous” asteroid the size of the Eiffel Tower will pass within Earth’s orbit next week just in case you wanna hold off on your Christmas shopping or anythingWell this isn’t unsettling at all.
New Zealand PM Says “There’s Not Gonna Be An End Point To This Vaccination Program” And She’ll Never “Be Satisfied” Till Everyone Is JabbedNew Zealand, with Prime Minister and wannabe dictator Jacinda Arden, continues to lead the world in insane overreaction to the Covid-19 pandemic.
I’m not saying we’re about to be invaded by aliens, but…I don’t mean to panic and sound the alarm or anything… but this is giving me the creeps!
Watch: Hillary Clinton read through her “would have been” victory speech and hoo boy what an embarrassing pity partyThis is up there with some of the most awkward things I’ve ever seen.
There’s now a camera as small as a grain of salt that takes stunning high-def photos and I bet the totalitarians can’t wait to get their hands on itFrom the daguerrotype, to the Polaroid, to the Jam Cam, we’ve now come to this:
Amazon’s outage just locked people out of their homes, scrambled their refrigerators, and shut off their Christmas lights … I dunno, maybe this is a warning of some kind?Does aaaaaaanyone else find this to be, I don’t know, the least little teensy weensy bit concerning?
So… Twitter just suspended the popular account tracking the Ghislaine Maxwell trial 🤨
There is a restaurant in Wisconsin called Omicron Family Restaurant and of course they’re selling ‘Rona-themed shirts 🤣You gotta love stuff like this:
Stop everything and read this insane megathread about a soldier who was “railroaded for murder by corrupt politicians and the FBI” and the lawyer who became a Christian while working to free himThis is an absolutely bonkers tale full of insane corruption and redemption.
They’re rewriting 1984 to fall in line with feminist orthodoxy—yes, they’re actually doing this with no sense of irony whatsoever!We have reached the stage of political discourse where they’ve actually started to subject Orwell himself to Orwellianism:
Stores in Germany now have signs saying “Unvaccinated Not Welcome” and I really think people need to brush up on their history a bitEveryone laughs when you compare something to the Nazis, but when it’s literally a case of German society being segregated, with hatred being projected toward one group on signs that ban them from stores, I THINK there’s a case to go full-blown red alert on this sucker.
Amid lockdowns, masks, and virtual schooling, surgeon general warns of emerging mental health crisis among childrenNearly two years ago, when the powers-that-be shut down most of the country and sent millions and millions of schoolchildren into indefinite isolation, a relatively small chorus of voices immediately began warning that the effects of such policy might actually be worse for kids than COVID is.
DeSantis Takes Jab At Liberal States, Says People In Florida “Don’t Have To Show Medical Papers To Get A Beer”Last week, NYC Mayor and groundhog murdering giant, Bill de Blasio announced the toughest Covid restrictions and vaccine passport mandates in the country.
A 13-year-old high school student in LA was given the Covid shot at school without his parents’ consentI don’t care if you’re pro-vaccine or anti-vaccine, this is too much:
I have never seen a goal scored like this beforeThis is the single most impressive assist I’ve ever seen in my life:
Great news: Early data suggest that omicron is making people “much less sick” than other COVID variantsFinally, a bit of good news about COVID-19:
Some Lunatics Burned Down The Huge Christmas Tree In Front Of Fox News Last Night!Last night in New York, some lunatics set the Christmas tree in front of the News Corp. Building on fire.
Watch Jordan Peterson Explain In Under A Minute Exactly How Societies Descend Into ChaosThis clip from Jordan Peterson’s appearance on the Joe Rogan Experience is going viral, even though it’s not new.
Trumpian politics is about to crown Stacey Abrams governorAs if there hasn’t been enough drama the last six years, there’s an interesting phenomenon that is about to occur within the Republican Party, playing out on the main stage of the newly-minted swing state of Georgia.
Tesla is letting drivers play video games on the car’s touch screen and yeah there’s no way this ends badlyTime was, driving schools warned against distracted driving. Now it’s apparently industry standard:
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
99.) MARK LEVIN
December 8, 2021
On Wednesday’s Mark Levin Show, the American Marxist elements in America, backed by the media and embraced by the Democrat party, have brought us the crime wave we are seeing across the country. The George Floyd riots in 2020 were seen as an opportunity for a war on cops, capitalism, and society. The Democrat party has the help from George Soros to destroy America from within. Until Soros and the Democrat Party are held to account this crime will continue. We have a lack of leaders who will stand up to these radicals. Also, a Wall Street Journal poll shows Hispanic voters are evenly split between parties and split between backing Donald Trump and President Biden. It’s all about economics. A lot of people who have come to America have suffered through socialism or autocracies. They see what’s happening now and reject it. They want the benefits of a free society. Later, Mark Meadows has sued January 6 committee members and Nancy Pelosi because they are trying to compel him to violate executive privilege. They needed to go on offense and they are doing it; they are fighting back! Finally, Scott Atlas calls in to discuss his new book, A Plague Upon Our House: My Fight at the Trump White House to Stop COVID from Destroying America.
THIS IS FROM:
Philadelphia Inquirer
Michael Nutter: Larry Krasner owes an apology to the 521 families of Philly’s homicide victims | Opinion
ABC News
‘It’s just crazy’: 12 major cities hit all-time homicide records
Fox News
Kim Potter trial: Daunte Wright’s victims remember slain Minnesota 20-year-old, ‘Karma’s a b—-‘
Wall St Journal
Hispanic Voters Now Evenly Split Between Parties, WSJ Poll Finds
Politico
House Republicans seethe over Senate GOP’s debt deal
Right Scoop
Mark Meadows sues Pelosi and hack Jan 6th committee
Rumble
Mark Levin: Trump vs. Biden, ‘There’s No Comparison’
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Stanton Sharpe/SOPA Images/LightRocket
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
103.) RELIABLE NEWS
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Get ready for those boosters.
Arizona Republican Party candidate says the Republican Party is “disgusting.”
Hillary sobs as she reads her presidential acceptance speech.
China is weaponizing space but we are doing a great job with pronouns.
Serious problems with our economy, but you won’t hear much about it.
Biden’s poll numbers are at the point of no return.
‘My body, my choice’? Only for abortion as the left pushes vaccine mandatesThe left wants liberty for pregnant women but tells the rest of us to pound salt. On Monday, lame-duck Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that “Omicron is here, and it… | |
CDC to Change the Definition of “Fully Vaccinated,” Get Ready for Endless BoostersThe definition of fully vaccinated in the United States will be changed, medical tyrant Dr. Anthony Fauci said Wednesday. “It’s going to be a matter of when, not if,” Fauci, the head of the National… | |
Breaking…FEC Allows Foreigners to Finance US Ballot Referendums, Recalls, Redistricting, et alNon-citizens are now allowed to finance US ballot initiatives, referendums, and recalls. None of these foreigners will have our best interests at heart. They can also finance congressional redistricting. Currently,… | |
Pathetic GOP Candidate Says “Republican Party Is Disgusting to Me”A Republican primary candidate in Arizona finds the Republican Party “disgusting.” He doesn’t “respect Candace Owens anymore,” and wouldn’t invite her to a Christmas party. It gets worse as it… | |
Deeply Troubling Findings in WI 2020 ElectionThe Wisconsin Committee on Campaigns and Elections hearing began on Wednesday, and it exposed some deeply troubling evidence, but it will be ignored. Former Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman… | |
MSNBC Analyst Suggests a “Federal Takeover” of Elections in Red StatesIf we think people’s civil rights are being violated, we’ll do a federal takeover. I know lots of people are going to scream about this. The right-wingers are going to… | |
Great Second Amendment News!Unconstitutional Red Flag Laws are out of the NDAA! Anti-gun activists have taken a small number of gun violence cases to force through “Red Flag Laws” in a number of… | |
Elon Musk Finds Biden’s BBB & Government “Violence” – “Scary”Honestly, I would just can this whole bill— don’t pass it… I would just delete it. DELETE. ~ Elon Musk Elon Musk slammed Joe Biden and his Build Back Better… | |
All Whitey Wall Street Opens In AtlantaJust kidding. An All ‘New Black Wall Street’ opened in Atlanta. It’s a shopping center for Black people and for Black people. They’re segregating themselves but we thought that was… | |
Hillary Cries As She Reads Her 2016 Presidential Acceptance SpeechFor the first time, Hillary Clinton read her 2016 presidential speech during a recent interview. She was sure she was going to win and it was obviously a crushing defeat.… | |
Biden’s Finished But Has 3 Years to Finish Us OffA new Wall Street Journal poll on Joe Biden’s job approval is absolutely horrendous. It shows that only 27% of Americans believe Biden’s administration is on the right track. Overall,… | |
Michael Savage Talks Hunter’s Art & Releasing Crazy GITMO PrisonersDr. Savage was on Stinchfield last night to discuss Hunter’s art and the lunatic prisoners Joe Biden wants to release from GITMO and put back on the battlefield. First, he… | |
CCP Is Weaponizing Space as Kamala Focuses on the ClimateJoe Biden and his childlike staff are saber-rattling with Russia, but it’s pointless. No one is afraid of him and his Marxist advisors who think the greatest threat to the… | |
Fauci Diminishes Free Will While Pretending He ‘Respects’ ItDuring an appearance on the far-far-left propaganda network, MNSBC, Dr. Anthony Fauci claimed he “respects” free will before quickly diminishing its value because we are in “unusual times”. He’s sly… | |
Something Bad Is About to Happen to Our EconomyTHE COMING COLLAPSE IS NOW A REAL POSSIBILITY The United States is becoming more and more reliant on globalism. We have outsourced our manufacturing, including drugs, steel, minerals, much of… | |
2 Women Beaten, 1 Disfigured Didn’t Warrant Bail for Career CriminalNew York City Life With Dangerous, Homeless People Free to Assault Anyone A homeless man charged with beating some random guy last year was dumped back on the street thanks… | |
A Constitutional Cure for Covid-19Covid, Covid, Covid. Variant, variant, variant. Trust me, I’m the government’s highest-paid employee, and “I represent science.” Show your papers, wear a mask, take a shot or lose your job.… | |
Killing the Golden GooseAesop’s Fable number 87 is titled, The Goose With The Golden Eggs. There are several versions of this story, but the gist of it is as follows: One day a… | |
Watch Fox’s 50′ Christmas Tree Aflame Thanks to a Nasty FirebugA 49-year-old man, Craig Tamanaha, a name used by Hindus and Muslims, has been taken into custody after a large Christmas tree outside the Fox News building in Manhattan appeared to have been… | |
Chicago Violence Forces Off-Duty Cops Back to WorkMayor Lori Lightfoot, or is it Lori Lightweight, is running around blaming everyone but herself for the disastrous crime wave in Chicago. When she’s not blaming guns and the police,… | |
Schools Plan to Lie & Cheat to ‘Help’ MinoritiesThe Left is destroying school standards with the big lie and with cheating Every minority child gets a trophy I would prefer even to fail with honor than win by… | |
DC Buffoons Could Actually Get Us Into War with RussiaOur political class wants Ukraine to join NATO, which would anger Vladimir Putin and push him further into the arms of China. The US is threatening Russia as they amass… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) BECKER NEWS
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
110.) RIGHT & FREE
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HANNIBAL, Missouri — During a visit here in 1882, Mark Twain wrote to his wife Olivia of the rush of sentiments he experienced returning to the town of his…
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Just one of the many disturbing things coming out of the Maxwell trial.
111.) UNITED VOICE
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112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO
113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
Jussie Smollett’s defense team will be hard-pressed to overcome this.
This past Wednesday, the United States Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. In the case, Mississippi is…
We now know more about the relationship between Epstein and Maxwell.
Insurgent Conservatives
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114.) WAKING TIMES
115.) UNCOVER DC
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