Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday June 26, 2019.
WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
DAILY SIGNAL
Jun 26, 2019
Good morning from Washington, which continues to spend
like a drunken sailor. Justin Bogie takes a sobering look at what a new report says about our government spending. Should rich people get food stamps? One millionaire was horrified to discover he could, despite being honest about his finances. Fred Lucas has
that story, as well as a look at the new White House press secretary. Four years ago today, the Supreme Court decided to effectively overrule millions of Americans’ votes and mandate legalization of same-sex marriage.
News
After
Legally Receiving Food Stamps, This Millionaire Is Trying to Change the System
“I begged [a government official] to find some reason to deny my
application for food stamps,” says Rob Undersander, a retired engineer
in Waite Park, Minnesota.
More
Commentary
Ilhan
Omar’s Ideological Attacks on 2 Christian Pastors
The remarkable stories that two pastors shared about growing up
poor in broken communities and beating the odds were of zero interest to
Omar.
More
Analysis
Reps.
Dan Crenshaw, Mike Johnson Share How They Want to Tackle Border Crisis
Republican Study Committee Chairman Mike Johnson, R-La., and Rep.
Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, discuss immigration, socialism, bipartisanship,
and more.
More
Commentary
PBS
Is Indoctrinating Our Kids. It’s Time to Defund Them.
Public media programming is becoming more antagonistic toward
conservative and religious viewpoints. Parents and churches should be
the ones discussing marriage and family with their children—not PBS,
writes Rep. Doug Lamborn.
More
News
Stephanie
Grisham to Replace Sarah Sanders as White House Press Secretary
Grisham was part of the Trump campaign in 2015 and has been in the
White House longer than anyone else on the White House staff except for
social media director Dan Scavino.
More
News
Mentally
Disabled Woman Will No Longer Be Forced to Abort Her Child, After Court Reverses Ruling
“This case exposes how far the tyranny of the abortion regime extends,” says Obianuju Ekeocha, a pro-life advocate in Britian.
More
Commentary
4 Takeaways
From a New Report on the National Debt
Despite the strong economy, the nation remains in a precarious and
unsustainable budget position, just as it was last year. Debt held by
the public is set to rise to nearly one and a half times the size of the
economy in the coming decades.
More
Commentary
Forget
Reparations. Money Won’t Solve Black Community’s Problems.
The reparations movement would be an amusing sideshow were it not for its damaging distractions.
More
The Daily Signal is brought to you by more than half a million members of The Heritage Foundation.
Donate to The Daily Signal Find us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter How are we doing? We welcome your comments, suggestions, and story tips. Please reply to this email or send us a note at comments@dailysignal.com. The Daily Signal 214 Massachusetts Avenue, NE Washington, DC 20002 (800) 546-2843 Add morningbell@heritage.org to your address book to ensure that you receive emails from us. You are subscribed to this newsletter as rickbulow74@live.com. If you want to receive other Heritage Foundation newsletters, or opt out of this newsletter, please click here to update your subscription. |
LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
IN THIS ISSUE: – Presidential Primary Debate History: Lessons for 2020 PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY DEBATE HISTORY: LESSONS FOR 2020 Candidate showdowns go back many decades, but have only recently become part of the nomination fabric By Kyle Kondik Managing Editor, Sabato’s Crystal Ball |
Editor’s Note: This is the first of two issues of the Crystal Ball this week. We’ll be back after the conclusion of the second Democratic debate on Thursday night with an assessment of how the debates went. In the meantime, we present an updated history of modern presidential primary debates, which date back to 1948. — The Editors KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE — There have been nearly 200 presidential primary debates since 1948. — Almost all of them have been held in the last four decades. — Although Democrats have a record-breaking primary field, they do not appear likely to break the record for the number of candidates appearing on a stage at once, 11, set by Republicans last cycle. — No incumbent president has participated in a primary debate, and Donald Trump seems likely to continue that trend. Five angles on primary debates The race for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination has been going on for months (and it feels like years). Yet in some ways the battle only begins tonight with the first televised debate. The specifics of this first round of debates on the Democratic side are historically novel. While there have been debates on back-to-back dates in a nomination campaign, this is the first time that two totally different slates of candidates will debate each other. The Democratic National Committee opted to use a drawing to determine the 10 candidates who will debate tonight and the 10 who will debate tomorrow. Four years ago, and in the midst of a field that was very large (although not as large as this two-dozen member field), Republicans opted to hold double-header debates in the pre-primary season, with the lower-polling candidates participating in a so-called undercard debate before the better-polling candidates debated at the main event. The DNC has sanctioned up to 12 debates, although the total number of discrete debates will almost certainly be larger than that because the first debate, happening tonight and tomorrow, really counts as two debates, not one. Or at least that’s how we’re counting them as part of our updated history of presidential primary debates. We debuted this history four years ago and have updated it, adding all of the 2016 primary debates. Including both the undercard and main event debates from the 2016 Republican race, plus the Democratic debates featuring, most notably, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders that cycle, there have now been 92 Republican primary debates and 104 Democratic bouts since 1948, when the first modern presidential primary debate was held. That Democratic total will grow by four this month and next, as the party is set to hold back-to-back debates tonight and tomorrow in Miami and then July 30-31 in Detroit. Presumably, the back-to-backs will become unnecessary at some point as the DNC ratchets up the polling and donor thresholds for inclusion (as it has done for debates in September and October). The full history is included at the end of the online version of this story (the tables detailing every single debate for both parties are too unwieldy to include via email). But first of all, here are some quick observations. For more trends from history, see our piece from four years ago, when we first released this historical background on presidential primary debates. 1. Bulk of debates held recently While we count 196 debates in modern presidential primary history, almost all of these have come within the last four decades. Prior to 1980, Republicans held just one debate, in 1948 (more on that below), while Democrats held 11 in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. That means that 94% of all presidential primary debates have been held just since 1980. Figure 1 shows the trend. Figure 1: Primary debates, 1948-2016 |
It may not be a coincidence that the rise of presidential primary debates has come in the post-primary reform era. Following the chaotic and explosive 1968 Democratic primary, when Vice President Hubert Humphrey won the Democratic nomination despite not competing in the primaries, both parties eventually reformed their processes to give voters significantly more say in who the presidential nominees would be. Debates therefore became more important because presidential nominations were being decided by a portion of the larger electorate as opposed to party insiders.
At this point, the parties seem petrified of showing any preference toward any of the candidates; this cycle, the Democrats have opted for polling and donor thresholds to determine who gets to appear in debates.
That has led to some candidate inclusions, and exclusions, that never would’ve happened in a political era where party elites held and exercised more sway over such decisions. For instance, self-help guru Marianne Williamson, who had to retreat from peddling anti-vaccination twaddle just last week, made the first Democratic debate while Gov. Steve Bullock (D-MT), a late primary entrant who nonetheless has a long history of statewide electoral success in a state that votes Republican at the presidential level, couldn’t even get in. Something seems off to us about that. Would it not be reasonable for parties to figure out a way to prioritize candidates with prior service to the party as opposed to total outsiders? The same can be said about Trump and the Republicans, but Trump’s immediate polling success would’ve made excluding him from the debates in 2015 unreasonable (practically speaking, neither Williamson nor Bullock has demonstrated any meaningful support in polls — nor have many of the other candidates who will be on one of the debate stages).
In any event, the prevalence of primary debates is a somewhat new feature of the primary process, at least if one looks at the long history of presidential nominations. And the parties having to hold multiple debates at once to accommodate gigantic fields is even newer, as the Republicans in 2016 were the first party that really had to grapple with that problem. It’s easy to nitpick the process the GOP chose, or the Democrats are using now, but in fairness there is not much of a roadmap for either party to deal with such a problem.
2. Democrats unlikely to set record
Prior to 2016, the maximum number of candidates that appeared on any primary debate stage was 10, set by Republicans in the 1996 and 2008 cycles and Democrats in the 2004 cycle. However, the Republicans actually had a debate with 11 candidates in September 2015. Of course, Republicans had more than 11 presidential candidates total: The GOP roster included 17 candidates at its numerical peak. It’s just that the GOP forced the worst-polling candidates to compete in the “undercard” debate prior to the main event.
Figure 2: How many participate?
Democrats have even more candidates this time: now 25 with the recent addition of former Rep. Joe Sestak of Pennsylvania. But the DNC is limiting each debate to 10 total participants, with 20 slots over two nights. One wonders if, later in the process, whether the DNC might allow a larger debate stage in order to consolidate two nights of debates into one. But for the time being, the GOP’s debate-stage participant record of 2016 appears safe even as Democrats are breaking records with their total number of presidential aspirants. 3. Single-issue debate not unprecedented Gov. Jay Inslee (D-WA) is emphasizing climate change and has proposed having a debate entirely focused on the subject. A strong majority of the other Democratic candidates agree with him, but Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez has nixed the idea. Whatever the merits of a single-issue debate, there is historical precedent for it — indeed, the very first presidential primary debate that we counted in our history was a single-issue debate. Republican presidential candidates Gov. Thomas Dewey (R-NY) and former Gov. Harold Stassen (R-MN) held the first modern debate in 1948. The debate, conducted over radio in advance of the Oregon primary, focused on a single question: whether the Communist Party should be outlawed in the United States (Dewey said no, Stassen said yes). Dewey, previously the 1944 Republican nominee, won the nomination again in 1948, losing in a famous upset to President Harry Truman in November. 4. Incumbents don’t debate While the Democrats are going to hold, in all likelihood, more than a dozen total debates thanks to the back-to-back events starting tonight, there almost certainly will not be any Republican primary debates. The Republican National Committee disbanded its debate committee last year, an unmistakable sign that the party has no interest in sanctioning a debate featuring President Donald Trump and any potential challengers. A president not participating in a primary debate would be in keeping with history: No sitting president has appeared in a primary debate, even ones who ended up facing significant primary challenges (Gerald Ford in 1976, Jimmy Carter in 1980, and George H.W. Bush in 1992). If and when a sitting president has a prominent intraparty challenge, we suspect that incumbent will face intense pressure to participate in a debate, as debates have become so clearly part of the presidential primary fabric. But the last three incumbents who ran for reelection (Bill Clinton in 1996, George W. Bush in 2004, and Barack Obama in 2012) did not face such pressure because they didn’t have any real primary opposition. As of now, Trump’s only opponent is a gadfly candidate, former Gov. William Weld (R-MA), who most recently was Gary Johnson’s running mate on the 2016 Libertarian Party ticket. 5. The eventual nominee will debate Since 1972, every non-incumbent major party presidential nominee has appeared in a primary debate, and many of these nominees participated in all or nearly all of the contests included on our list. However, frontrunners do occasionally skip early debates. Ronald Reagan passed on an Iowa debate in 1980 only to see George H.W. Bush beat him in the caucuses there (Reagan recovered and won). George W. Bush passed on the first few debates in the 2000 cycle but ended up steamrolling to the nomination, despite his landslide loss to Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) in New Hampshire. In late January 2016, Trump skipped a pre-Iowa debate as part of a feud with then-Fox News host Megyn Kelly, who was part of the moderator team for the debate. Trump would lose Iowa to Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX). Is it possible that skipping the debate hurt Trump in Iowa? Potentially: He was leading in polls before losing to Cruz, although it’s hard to know what role the debate played in that result, if any. Trump would go on to win the nomination anyway. It seems certain that the eventual Democratic nominee either will be on the debate stage Wednesday or Thursday night, or will be on a future debate stage. That this point we’re making seems so blindingly obvious is a testament to how ingrained debates have become to the nomination process. Read the fine print Learn 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!” |
© Copyright by the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia |
Manage Your Subscription This message was sent to rickbulow1974@gmail.com from goodpolitics@virginia.edu
Larry J. Sabato
UVA Center for Politics
PO Box 400806
Charlottesville, VA 22904
THE EPOCH TIMES
View this email in your browser
“Teach thy tongue to say ‘I do not know’, and thou shalt progress.” MAIMONIDES Trump Awards Highest Military Honor to Iraq War Veteran US Hopes to Re-launch China Trade Talks, Won’t Accept Conditions on Tariffs: Official Senate Bill Aims at Tech Giant Accountability Border Patrol Injured After Rock Was Thrown at His Patrol Car in California President Trump threatened to respond with “overwhelming force” to the next attack by Iran on any U.S. assets. The president issued the warning after Iran issued a statement ridiculing the White House in response to sanctions ordered by Trump, which targeted the leader of the Iranian regime and senior Iranian military commanders. Read more America’s 82 top nonprofit hospital groups have experienced massive growth in annual revenues and asset value even as health care costs for most families and individuals are zooming upward, according to a report by government watchdog Open The Books. Read more Former President Jimmy Carter showed support for President Trump’s recent decision to not take military action against Iran after the Islamic regime shot down a U.S. Navy drone over international waters. “I agree with President Trump on his decision not to take military action against Iran,” Carter said while teaching Sunday school at Maranatha Baptist Church in his hometown in Georgia, reported NPR. Read more As part of an ongoing nationwide backlash against politically correct restrictions on free speech in higher education institutions, a new “campus intellectual diversity” law in South Dakota that takes effect July 1 will require the state’s universities to respect free speech rights, promote intellectual diversity, and submit annual reports detailing their efforts. Read more On the eve of the G-20 summit, Chinese leader Xi Jinping spoke about challenges within the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) during a meeting with senior cadres in the Politburo. Meanwhile, the state-run, Beijing-friendly Tsinghua University released a report concluding that the U.S.–China trade dispute would have minimal impact on the Chinese economy. Read more Acting Customs and Border Protection Commissioner John Sanders has resigned and will leave his position on July 5. Sanders has been acting as head of the border agency since April when Kevin McAleenan was picked to take over as Acting Secretary of Homeland Security. Read more See More Top Stories The Protests in Hong Kong and the Value of a Jury of Peers By Ronald Rychlak The people of Hong Kong just obtained a temporary reprieve from Beijing’s assault on their autonomy. The issue of the day was a controversial extradition bill that would require certain defendants to be sent to mainland China for trial. The people of Hong Kong fought hard against it. In doing so, they reminded us about the value of the right to a jury of one’s peers… Read more The UN’s Great Extinction Scare By Mark Hendrickson According to a new United Nations report, “around 1 million species [out of 1.8 million known species] already face extinction, many within decades.” This disturbing prediction (by no means the first such prediction) appeared in the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) “Summary for Policy Makers.” (In case you are not familiar with these U.N. summary reports, standard operating procedure is that the summaries are released weeks or months before the full-length reports prepared by the scientists who were chosen as contributors… Read more See More Opinions US, Canadian Communists Meet With Venezuela Leadership By Trevor Loudon Earlier in March, a communist-led delegation from the United States and Canada arrived in Venezuela for a series of meetings with the struggling socialist nation’s senior leadership. Several members of this delegation have a history of supporting the United States’ enemies in Tehran, Damascus, Moscow, Beijing, Pyongyang, Havana, and now Caracas. This raises major questions about whether these individuals are working against the United States with hostile foreign countries in violation of federal law. Read more In the US China trade war, what’s behind the Chinese communist party’s (CCP’s) strategy, with Liu He walking away from the trade talks at the last minute? What’s the real relationship between Chinese telecom giant Huawei, and the CCP’s quest for global 5G dominance? And how is this all a much, much bigger issue than just trade? China’s Strategy Against Trump and America: Trade War, Huawei, 5G Copyright © 2019 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved. Want to change how you receive these emails? You can unsubscribe from this list or remove my account. |
THE FLIP SIDE
View this email in your browser
Wednesday, June 26, 2019 Free College On Monday, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) unveiled a plan to forgive all student debt and make public colleges tuition-free. Senate.gov Sanders’s plan is more sweeping than that offered in April by Sen Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), which limits loan forgiveness based on income. Medium From the Left The left is divided, with some in favor of Sanders’ overhaul of higher education, while others propose more modest reforms. “Why have public universities gotten so expensive?… Adjusted for inflation, the cost of educating students at public universities has actually increased only modestly. Rather, it’s the price that’s gone through the roof, thanks in large part to a massive shift in costs from taxpayers to students… student tuition as a share of total spending at our nation’s public colleges and universities rose from 24 percent in 1988 to 46 percent in 2015… [In the state of Washington] the funding split dramatically flipped from 70 percent state, 30 percent tuition in 1991, to 30 percent state, 70 percent tuition by 2013… “Boomers like me have pulled up the ladder behind us after being educated largely at taxpayer expense… I enthusiastically support both student debt forgiveness and debt-free college. Not just because it would be damn good for the economy by giving a whole generation saddled by debt more freedom to build up savings, buy homes, and contribute to the economy. But because I believe in the golden rule: Give unto future generations the same opportunities and privileges my generation enjoyed.” David Goldstein, Vox “Spending on higher education is like spending on roads or public parks. You’re doing it for the health of all society. And sure, if you make it free to everyone, the wealthy benefit more, because they have more money they can then spend elsewhere. But it would be kind of crazy to charge admission to the country’s highways or national parks with a sliding scale fee that increases with income. A better solution is progressive taxation on the rich to scale back inequality across the board — something both Warren and Sanders are very much in favor of. Warren’s plan to cancel student debt has more technocratic finesse. But Sanders’ plan arguably tells the stronger moral story about what kind of country we should be.” Jeff Spross, The Week “In a polity that has decided to use markets as engines of production and distribution where the material bases of ordinary life are concerned, it is essential that all citizens be equipped with the wherewithal to thrive in those markets. And since, over time, markets drive technological and other changes of the sort that require sophisticated skills both to benefit by and even simply to navigate, that wherewithal requires not only primary and secondary, but also ‘higher’ education – i.e., college education. It would accordingly be profoundly unjust to leave access to higher education to the vagaries of the birth lottery. Rather, it must be an incident of citizenship itself.” Robert Hockett, Forbes Critics of Sanders’ plan, however, argue that “the democratic socialist candidate is running on a plan to bail out doctors, lawyers and their children to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars — while touting it as middle-class payback for the 2008 Wall Street bailout. Yes, Mr. Sanders would pay for his plans with a tax that fell mostly on the investing class; the point, however, is not the origin of the money but the alternative uses to which the money might be put. In that regard, it makes no sense to transfer so much of the revenue from one group of well-off people to another, when you could spend the $2.4 trillion on, say, pre-K schooling for poor children, college assistance for low-income young adults — or any of several other worthy public purposes whose benefits would reach a needier swath of the American population.” Editorial Board, Washington Post “Both Mr. Sanders and Ms. Warren… have proposed making all undergraduate programs at public colleges and universities free. That would reduce the need for borrowing. But it would not eliminate future student debt — not even close. That’s because most student loan debt isn’t taken out to attend undergraduate programs at public colleges and universities. Most loans are used for private colleges, for-profit colleges and, most of all, graduate school… This means that the day after Senator Sanders ‘hits the reset button,’ as he put it in the news conference, the national student debt odometer would begin rapidly spinning again… “Although the nation’s $1.6 trillion outstanding student loan balance is shocking in the aggregate, it’s composed of many different kinds of borrowers and many different academic programs. The Sanders and Warren plans illustrate the difficulty of moving from big-picture numbers and slogans to the nuts and bolts of federal policy.” Kevin Carey, New York Times “If we don’t want student debt to pile up all over again, we need to scrutinize the schools that caused the crisis in the first place and make sure young people are savvy debt consumers… First, for-profit education should be at the forefront of this issue… almost half of all students who enrolled at a for-profit school in 2004 defaulted within 12 years. That’s close to four times the default rate for other students, even though students at for-profits typically don’t take on as much debt… Second, the higher-education industry needs to take a deep look into improving completion rates… Finally, we need to do everything we can to make sure that students are financially literate.” Robert Gebelhoff, Washington Post From the Right The right opposes the plan, arguing that there are better ways to reduce costs and rejecting the idea that free college is a moral good. “The Sanders plan fails to focus on giving colleges a stronger incentive to keep tuition affordable and make sure their students graduate. (One possible way to do that, for instance, is to put schools on the hook to pay back a share of defaulted loans.) Nor does Sanders explore the need to create and encourage non-college pathways to the middle class.” James Pethokoukis, American Enterprise Institute “The reason schools keep raising their tuition is that students have easy access to federal student loans, and the government has a near-monopoly on the sector. Colleges know they can keep raising tuition without fear of losing students because federal loans serve as a guaranteed subsidy. Thus, the cost of college has skyrocketed and students find themselves deeper in debt. The solution is not to pay off existing student debt, but to dramatically reduce the federal subsidies pouring into higher education and restore the private market’s role in providing student loans. This would put long-needed pressure on colleges to keep their costs in check, since students would no longer have unlimited, guaranteed funds from the government… “At a time when Americans are more frustrated than ever with the education colleges are providing for the price, policymakers should be discussing ways to hold colleges accountable, rather than rewarding them with a blank check.” Mary Clare Amselem, The Daily Signal “Thanks to creeping credentialism, many jobs that once didn’t require a bachelor’s degree now do. College-funding mechanisms make little distinction between studying nuclear engineering and pursuing contemporary dance. Administration buildings teem with associate deputy deans for diversificlusion, and schools compete to have the most climbing walls per capita. The fix isn’t to promise taxpayer-funded diplomas for everybody… “[Furthermore] There’s no way a financial-transactions tax would pay for this. It could make America’s capital markets less liquid or push traders overseas. By lowering asset values, it would dent every 401(k) and public pension, while raising costs for institutional investors… The only way Mr. Sanders can possibly pay for his agenda—not only free college and this student-loan amnesty, but also a Green New Deal, Medicare for All, an expansion of Social Security, a federal job guarantee, higher teacher pay, and more—is to soak the middle class.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal “It would be hard to devise a plan that would shower more benefits on the wealthy than this one. Just 12% of college debt is owed by those in the bottom quarter of income earners… Sanders’ plan would relieve doctors, MBAs, and computer scientists of their student debt. These are people who are or soon will be making six-figure salaries. Keep in mind, too, that students who borrow money for college are investing in their own futures, since a college degree is a ticket to higher incomes.” John Merline, Issues & Insights “Even with opportunity costs factored in, the New York Fed calculates the return on investment in college at ‘nearly 14 percent,’ which ‘easily exceeds various investment benchmarks, such as the long-term return on stocks (7 percent) or bonds (3 percent).’ It’s not a great investment for everyone, particularly those who don’t finish. But a plan to forgive everyone’s loans, or even Elizabeth Warren’s plan to forgive nearly everyone’s loans, is a massive investment in a population that, by and large, are reaping, and will in the long term continue to reap, the rewards of a smart investment.” Jonathan Marks, Commentary “The average student is now graduating with $30,000 in debt, no small sum. But frankly, a college degree is worth it, as it increases lifetime earnings by millions. And the median monthly payment is just $222. If you can’t afford that, as a college graduate, it’s probably your own fault… “We must remember that while the cost of college has soared to outrageous levels and must be addressed, an affordable path to a college degree still exists. Almost anyone can go to a community college for two years to obtain an associate degree, with the average annual cost just $3,300, a sum easily payable through part-time work. After two years, one can transfer to a flagship state university and… graduate with a manageable amount of debt. Major in something like business or STEM and you’ll likely have no trouble meeting student loan payments. It’s absolutely fine for students to choose to forgo this path and instead attend their dream school. But it’s outrageous to imply that you shouldn’t be responsible for your debts after making that decision.” Brad Polumbo, Washington Examiner “The world doesn’t owe you a dream college or a dream house or a dream job. You have no right to someone else’s labor and time. If you want to attend free college, ask professors to offer you their lectures gratis or ask school administrators who run massive endowments to open their doors to everyone. Or, maybe, ask them to bring down their tuition prices.” David Harsanyi, The Federalist A libertarian’s take “Sanders’s free-tuition and debt-cancellation plan is less an attempt at redistribution than a statement of values… ‘We will make a full and complete education a human right’… Unfortunately, these newer-fangled human rights are substantially different from the old-fashioned kind because someone does have to pay for them. Physicians and nurses, and teachers and administrators, must be paid to spend their days providing your rights instead of doing something else. And so, these rights will always be limited… “Given those limits, one still must ask why a self-proclaimed socialist has focused on a new right that will mostly line the pockets of the educated and affluent rather than, say, a right to public transportation or assisted living… Sanders is unlikely to pick up [moderate suburbanite] voters during the primaries, but if he survives, he will need them during the general. And while they’re leery of the higher taxes his programs will require, they’ll be somewhat less worried if the proceeds will largely be spent on them and their progeny. Socialism for the upper middle class might not seem very, well, socialist, but it might turn out to be excellent politics.” Megan McArdle, Washington Post On the bright side… Bear has least impressed reaction to deputies trying to free him from locked room. Huffington Post Our volunteer team spends hours each night scanning the news, fact-checking, and debating one another, so your 5 minutes each morning can be well spent. If you’ve found value in our work, we welcome you to help sustain our efforts and expand our reach. Any support you can provide is greatly appreciated! Share Tweet Forward Sign Up Here Copyright © 2019 The Flip Side, All rights reserved. You can unsubscribe from this list here. |
POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Will Trump overshadow the Democrats’ first debate night?
By ANNA PALMER, JAKE SHERMAN and DANIEL LIPPMAN
06/26/2019 06:00 AM EDT
DRIVING THE DAY
BREAKING OVERNIGHT … NOKO SUMMIT NO. 3 IS COMING … WSJ’S TIMOTHY MARTIN in Seoul: “The U.S. and North Korea have been engaged in informal talks about a third nuclear summit between the two countries’ leaders, South Korean President Moon Jae-in said Wednesday.
“Mr. Moon didn’t provide a timeline for the meeting between President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. He said the two sides had held ‘behind-the-scenes’ talks, not official dialogue, after February’s Vietnam summit that ended abruptly without a deal.
“The South Korean leader’s remarks come just days before President Trump is scheduled to visit Seoul, a trip that is viewed as an effort to help jump-start talks with Pyongyang.” WSJ
G-20 LOOK-AHEAD … CNBC: “Treasury Secretary Mnuchin says U.S.-China trade deal is 90% complete”: “Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told CNBC Wednesday that the U.S. and China were almost there on a trade deal. ‘We were about 90% of the way there (with a deal) and I think there’s a path to complete this,’ he told CNBC’s Hadley Gamble on Wednesday.
“He said he’s confident President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping can make progress in stalled trade talks at the forthcoming Group of 20 (G-20) meeting this weekend. ‘The message we want to hear is that they want to come back to the table and continue because I think there is a good outcome for their economy and the U.S. economy to get balanced trade and to continue to build on this relationship.’” CNBC
THE DAY DEMOCRATS HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR: MUELLER TO THE HILL JULY 17 … ANDREW DESIDERIO and HEATHER CAYGLE: “Dems secure testimony from ‘reluctant’ Mueller”: “Former special counsel Robert Mueller will testify in public before the House Intelligence and Judiciary Committees on July 17, both panels announced late Tuesday, in what is expected to be a high-stakes hearing centering on President Donald Trump’s efforts to interfere with Mueller’s investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election.
“Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) and Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) served Mueller with a subpoena late Tuesday night after the Democrat-led panels and the former special counsel failed to agree on terms for voluntary public testimony.
“Mueller’s appearance could be a defining moment for Trump, who will be forced to watch as the man whose investigation tormented his inner circle for two years recounts the president’s attempts to thwart the investigation, which Trump has long derided as a ‘witch hunt.’” POLITICO
— TEMPER YOUR EXPECTATIONS, EVERYONE. REMEMBER WHAT MUELLER SAID: “Any testimony from this office would not go beyond our report. It contains our findings and analysis and the reasons for the decisions we made. We chose those words carefully and the work speaks for itself. And the report is my testimony. I would not provide information beyond that which is already public in any appearance before Congress.”
… BUT, there is absolutely no doubt that Mueller speaking publicly about the report will be very powerful. A complete circus, but powerful. There will be wall-to-wall coverage on every cable news channel, and networks will break into coverage, we imagine.
… THIS WILL BE A JOINT HEARING of Intel and Judiciary, so you’ll have 60 lawmakers involved in this made-for-TV event. (There is some overlap between the two panels.)
Good Wednesday morning. SCOOP: DEPT. OF COUNTERPROGRAMMING … IF YOU’RE WAKING UP IN MIAMI THIS MORNING, and you open the Miami Herald or El Nuevo Herald, you’ll see that the TRUMP CAMPAIGN has bought two full-page, full-color “Latinos For Trump” ads. “Latinos Flourish in Trump’s Economy,” the ad says, and it boasts that it is the “best economy in decades.” “President Trump is clear on immigration: Millions have followed the law to come to America, new immigrants should too.” The Miami Herald ad… The Nuevo Herald ad
THE FIRST DEMOCRATIC DEBATE is tonight in Miami at 9 p.m. on NBC, MSNBC and Telemundo. ON NIGHT ONE: Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, Julián Castro, John Delaney, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-Hawaii), Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Beto O’Rourke, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). Everything you need to know about the debate
— NYT’S ANNIE KARNI: “What Will Democrats Look for in Debates? Someone They Can Imagine Onstage With Trump” … NYT’S MIKE GRYNBAUM in Miami: “Debates Mark the Starting Line for the Media’s Race Through 2020”
— WAPO’S ASHLEY PARKER: “‘Looking for fireworks’: How 2016 — and Trump — ushered in the era of the mega-debate”
— WSJ’S CHAD DAY, ELIZA COLLINS and TARINI PARTI: “First Democratic Debates to Pit Experience Against Lesser-Knowns”
POLITICO MAGAZINE is up with a new feature — “The Field,” its guide to the presidential candidates. The issue will examine key moments that made these 2020 contenders the people and politicians they are today. … TIM ALBERTA: “‘Complete this Sentence: Donald Trump Wins Reelection If … ’” … JOHN HARRIS: “Why 2020 Democrats Pretend to be Radical”
NEW: JOE BIDEN’S CAMPAIGN is launching an eight-week fellowship to train new political organizers around the country. “This fellowship will include weekly online trainings where you will learn the ins-and-outs of grassroots and digital organizing to help elect Joe,” the description reads. The details
NYT’S ‘THE LONG RUN’ SERIES … SHERYL STOLBERG and ASTEAD HERNDON: “‘Lock the S.O.B.s Up’: Joe Biden and the Era of Mass Incarceration”
A message from Blue Cross Blue Shield Association:
We believe everyone should have access to health care, no matter who you are or where you live. In every neighborhood in every state, Blue Cross and Blue Shield companies are working to improve health and expand access to quality care. Learn more at
THE JUICE … SARAH HUCKABEE SANDERS had a pair of going-away events this week after wrapping up her tenure as White House press secretary.
— SPOTTED at Sanders’ White House correspondent going-away drinks Monday night at Rare, organized by Anita Kumar and Francesca Chambers: Josh Dawsey, Ashley Parker, Anne Gearan, Jennifer Jacobs, David Smith, Chris Johnson, Hunter Walker, Shirish Date, Franco Ordonez, Jeff Mason, Steve Holland, Todd Gillman, Jon Karl, Sara Cook, Fin Gomez, Debra Saunders, Dave Boyer, Asawin Suebsaeng, Nikki Schwab, John Roberts, Hogan Gidley, Steve Groves, Judd Deere and Jarrod Agen. The NYT coverage, by Shawn McCreesh … Erik Wemple in WaPo
— SPOTTED at Sanders’ White House going-away party, at the Trump Hotel on Tuesday night: President Donald Trump (who stopped by after a fundraiser to offer a brief toast), Ivanka Trump, Energy Secretary Rick Perry, Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), Alyssa Farah, Linda McMahon, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, Joe Grogan, Rick Dearborn, Lindsey Walters, Raj Shah, Mick Mulvaney, Stephanie Grisham, Mercedes Schlapp, Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue, HHS Secretary Alex Azar, Pat Cipollone, Marc Short, Bill Shine, Kayleigh McEnaney …
… Kellyanne Conway, Brad Rateike, Stephen Miller, Larry Kudlow, Tim Murtaugh, Jessica Ditto, Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao, Andy Post, Sean Spicer, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, Hogan Gidley, Judd Deere, Sen. John Boozman (R-Ark.), HUD Secretary Ben Carson, Steven Groves, Donald Trump Jr. and Kimberly Guilfoyle, Derek Lyons, Nick Butterfield, Kerri Kupec, James Rockas, Ninio Fetalvo, May Davis, Chris Liddell, Julia Hahn, Catherine Keller, Ashley Mocarski, Michael Kratsios, Eric Bolling, Tony Sayegh, Zach Parkinson, VA Secretary Robert Wilkie, Bill Shine and Julie and Wynn Radford.
TRUMP TALKS IMMIGRATION — NYT’S MICHAEL SHEAR and JULIE DAVIS sat down with the president for an interview for their book, “Border Wars: Inside Trump’s Assault on Immigration,” which will be out Oct. 8. Pre-order for $28 on Amazon
HERE ARE SOME INTERVIEW SNIPPETS that are instructive to how Trump thinks about immigration, one of the animating issues of his presidency:
— ON TURMOIL AMONG IMMIGRATION OFFICIALS: “‘I do burn out on people, I do. If somebody’s not really great, I do,’ the president said during the interview in the Oval Office. He did not directly address the changes at Customs and Border Protection, but said he had made ‘good changes’ in the people who run his immigration agencies. ‘I understand what I want,’ he said. ‘And we’re starting to get there.’” NYT
— ON WHO’S RESPONSIBLE FOR CONDITIONS AT THE BORDER: “‘You know, they were built by President Obama, they are really not designed so much for children,’ Mr. Trump said in an interview in the Oval Office on Tuesday. ‘But you know, children can be there because we have no choice because of the laws, the laws are so bad.’
“Asked if his administration’s policies were to blame, Mr. Trump said the conditions existed because Democrats in Congress would not agree to policy changes that would stanch the flow of migrants across the border. ‘All I can say is that if they change the law, you wouldn’t have it,’ Mr. Trump said. ‘The cartels are making the money, are they using children’s — it’s virtual slavery. And if we could get a change, a very simple change it would go so quickly, so easily with the Democrats, we would be able to solve that problem very easily.’” NYT
POLITICO Playbook newsletter
Sign up today to receive the #1-rated newsletter in politics Email
By signing up you agree to receive email newsletters or alerts from POLITICO. You can unsubscribe at any time.
HEART-BREAKING PHOTO — “Father-daughter border drowning highlights migrants’ perils,” by AP’s Peter Orsi and Amy Guthrie in Mexico City: “The man and his 23-month-old daughter lay face down in shallow water along the bank of the Rio Grande, his black shirt hiked up to his chest with the girl tucked inside. Her arm was draped around his neck suggesting she clung to him in her final moments.
“The searing photograph of the sad discovery of their bodies on Monday, captured by journalist Julia Le Duc and published by Mexican newspaper La Jornada, highlights the perils faced by mostly Central American migrants fleeing violence and poverty and hoping for asylum in the United States.”AP
— WAPO’S @AshleyRParker: “Trump responds to images and visual cues. At the time, his aides said the gruesome photos of gassed Syrian children persuaded him to launch Tomahawk strikes against Assad. Will be interesting to see if this photo moves him.”
MEANWHILE … “Beleaguered refugee office girds for another wave of migrant children,” byRenuka Rayasam and Dan Diamond
A WHIP? … BLOOMBERG SCOOP: “Trump’s Protocol Chief Is Quitting Just Before the G-20 Summit,” by Jennifer Jacobs and Daniel Flatley: “The Trump administration official in charge of diplomatic protocol plans to resign and isn’t going to Japan for this week’s Group of 20 meetings, where he would have played a sensitive behind-the-scenes role, according to people familiar with the matter.
“Sean Lawler, a State Department official whose title is chief of protocol, is departing amid a possible inspector general’s probe into accusations of intimidating staff and carrying a whip in the office, according to one of the people.” Bloomberg
SARAH FERRIS, HEATHER CAYGLE and JENNIFER SCHOLTES: “Pelosi steers House to passage of border spending package”: “The House on Tuesday approved billions of dollars to ease the humanitarian crisis at the southern border, delivering a hard-fought victory to Speaker Nancy Pelosi after several days of battling with her caucus’ left flank.
“The House voted 230-195 — almost entirely along party lines — to approve the $4.5 billion package for the border, where an influx of Central American migrants has strained government agencies and led to conditions for detained children that both parties have called horrific. …
“Democrats will now dive into negotiations with Senate GOP leaders, in a difficult bid to get the long-delayed aid package signed into law before leaving town Thursday for a weeklong recess. But even if the two chambers reach an agreement, it’s unclear if President Donald Trump will sign the final bill, especially as he demands far-reaching changes to asylum law in exchange for permanently calling off mass deportation raids.” POLITICO
— BEHIND THE SCENES: THERE WAS A LOT OF TALK Tuesday about House Democrats being divided on the supplemental border bill, but PELOSI didn’t appear to be sweating the vote by Tuesday evening. She spent roughly 90 minutes before the bill passed at the DCCC Pride Month reception at the Conrad Hilton on Tuesday evening. Pelosi’s Deputy Chief of Staff Drew Hammill and his husband Jason Mida chaired the event, which celebrated the fourth anniversary of marriage equality and featured a performance from Baltimore native and “American Idol” finalist Jeremiah Lloyd Harmon.
— SPOTTED: Reps. David Cicilline (D-R.I.), Sharice Davids (D-Kan.), Sean Patrick Maloney (D-N.Y.), Mark Takano (D-Calif.), Cheri Bustos (D-Ill.) and Jim Himes (D-Conn.) along with Steve Elmendorf, Joe Falk, Catherine Pinot and Ingrid Duran, Brian Wolff, Winnie Stachelberg, JoDee Winterhof, Ben Needham and Robbie Mook.
2020 WATCH — ALEX ISENSTADT: “Martha McSally moves to head off GOP primary challenge” … “Trump endorses Tillis in North Carolina,” by James Arkin
TRUMP’S WEDNESDAY — The president will leave the White House en route to the Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel at 10:30 a.m. He will deliver remarks at the “Faith & Freedom Coalition” policy conference. Trump will return to the White House at 12:15 p.m. He will leave at 12:40 p.m. en route to Osaka, Japan.
PLAYBOOK READS
SCOTUS WATCH — “DOJ urges definitive ruling from SCOTUS on census citizenship question,” by Josh Gerstein: “The Trump administration made an unusual last-minute plea to the Supreme Court Tuesday, telling the justices that actions by lower courts make it urgent to act quickly to resolve the legality of adding a citizenship question to the 2020 census.
“The Justice Department move followed an appeals court order earlier Tuesday, which returned one lawsuit over the census to a district court judge to address recently-discovered evidence that the addition of a citizenship question may have been intended to diminish the political impact of the Latino vote.
“The latest tumult in the litigation was prompted by citizenship question opponents gaining access to evidence that the views of a deceased GOP redistricting expert, Thomas Hofeller, may have played a role in a Justice Department request that led to Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross adding the citizenship query to the census questionnaire.” POLITICO
TOP TWEET … HAPPENING TODAY: U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (@USCPSC): “CPSC’s annual fireworks safety demonstration will take place on the National Mall between 3rd and 4th street, starting at 9:45am. We’ll attempt to stream live on Instagram — follow along @ USCPSC #CelebrateSafely” w/ exploding gif
NUMBER DU JOUR: “The cost of *one stitch* at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital? $3,300.” Mission Local
DRAMA IN CHICAGO … SHIA KAPOS in ILLINOIS PLAYBOOK: “Eric Trump, the son of President Trump, was in Chicago on Tuesday when he was allegedly spat on by an employee at swanky Aviary in the West Loop, according to NBC/5’s Mary Ann Ahern, who tweeted about the incident. Chicago Police were on the scene ‘assisting the United States Secret Service,’ Police Spokesman Anthony Guglielmi tweeted.
“The alleged spitter was taken into Secret Service custody and Guglielmi wrote ‘Any and all inquiries regarding a federal protectee must be directed to the Secret Service.’ Eric Trump took the high road after spit-gate, offering the slightest dig at Chicago Trump haters in his own tweet: ‘Always love visiting @TrumpChicago. It is one of the most beautiful buildings in the world!’”
MEDIAWATCH — IF YOU READ ONE THING … THE DAILY BEAST’S LACHLAN CARTWRIGHT: “New York Times’ Trump Tax Team Imploded When Star Reporter David Barstow Went Rogue”: “Barstow had gone behind his colleagues’ backs to try and ghostwrite a book with the source for a massive payday—a move expressly forbidden by Times ethics rules, according to two people familiar with the situation. He pursued the source even after editors told him not to do the book and after his Pulitzer-winning colleagues stopped working with him over it. …
“Barstow told The Daily Beast he considered leaving the Timesin order to write the book, but strenuously denied he did anything wrong. In a statement, Baquet said such a ghostwriting gig was ‘unacceptable’ but that Barstow did not violate the paper’s ethics guidelines because the plan was ultimately scuttled.”
— Tom Scocca is joining Slate as politics editor. He most recently was the editor of Hmm Daily and is also an alum of Deadspin, Gawker and The Awl.
— HAPPENING TODAY: The National Press Club Journalism Institute, working with the Tribune Publishing Company, the Annenberg Foundation and the Michael and Jacky Ferro Foundation, is launching a new foundation to push for a permanent memorial for fallen journalists in Washington, D.C., with a board of advisers that includes folks like Dean Baquet, Don Graham, Andrea Mitchell and Matt Murray.
PLAYBOOKERS
SPOTTED: Beto O’Rourke walking into the Hilton Miami on Tuesday with two aides.
SPOTTED IN MIAMI Tuesday night at the FamousDC party at the Faena Hotel in Miami Beach: Tyler Pager, Brittany Shepard, Sabrina Singh, Juana Summers, Holly Campbell, Katelyn Caralle, David Catanese, Alex Finland, Craig Gordon, Tim Hogan, Sahil Kapur, Caroline Kenny, Danny Lyon, Alexa Miranda, Allie Raffa, Elina Shirazi, Lis Smith, Scott Thuman, Adrienne Watson, Amos Snead, Nathan Imperiale and Rodell Mollineau.
OUT AND ABOUT — SPOTTED Tuesday at the Walker Chapel Preschool in Arlington for the bill signing ceremony for “Jacob’s Law” — pic: Jacob’s sisters CJ and Ellie, Jay Timmons and Rick Olson, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, Del. Rip Sullivan (D-Va.), state Sen. Barbara Favola (D-Va.), Del. Mark Levine (D-Va.), Don McGahn, Josh Bolten, Tom Kuhn, Heidi Brock, former Rep. Steve Bartlett (R-Va.), Terri Fariello, Susan Neely, Bobbie Kilberg and more than 200 friends and family.
— SPOTTED at the opening dinner of the Bahrain peace plan conference Tuesday night: Christine Lagarde, Steve Schwarzman, John Hess, Aryeh Bourkoff, Dina Powell, Randall Stephenson, Masayoshi Son, Josette Sheeran, Jay Collins, Keith Croft, Stuart Levy and Anthony Scaramucci.
— SPOTTED IN ASPEN at Gary and Laura Lauder’s house Tuesday night for a dinner hosted by the Paul E. Singer Foundation, with special guest NYT columnist Bret Stephens in conversation with Dan Senor on rising anti-Semitism — pic: Paul Singer, Campbell Brown, Steven Rattner, Joshua and Dinah Foer, Bob Steele, Daniel Lubetzky, Marlies A. Carruth, Max Neuberger, Daniel Bonner and Harry Zieve Cohen.
BIRTHWEEK (was yesterday): Ryan Long, deputy staff director at House E&C (hat tip: Zack Roday) … POLITICO Europe’s Thibault Larger
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Mike Bender, WH reporter at the WSJ. How he got his start in journalism: “My dreams of becoming a professional baseball player ended when I was about 15. At 17, my mom talked me out of taking an apprenticeship to become a grower at a chain of suburban Cleveland nurseries. When I was 21, I was hired by the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel in Colorado. And two decades later, I’m birthday of the day!” Playbook Plus Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Chuck Robb is 8-0 … Elizabeth Wilner, director, global narrative, at Airbnb … Juliet Eilperin, WaPo’s senior national affairs correspondent … POLITICO’s Scott Bland … WSJ’s Louise Radnofsky … Dave Brown, director at Brunswick Group (h/ts Tim Griffin and George Little) … Mark Kadesh (h/t Jon Haber) … Adam Goers … Bloomberg’s Emma Kinery … Oubai Shahbandar … GOP pollster Jon McHenry … Mark Ritacco … Betsy Goldin … former Hawaii Gov. Neil Abercrombie is 81 … Emmalee Kalmbach, Sen. Rob Portman’s (R-Ohio) press secretary (h/t Emily Benavides) … Rutgers political science professor Ross Baker is 81 … Mickey Leibner, attorney at Mayer Brown … Joe Durheim … Lucy Silver … NYT’s Daniel Victor … Philip Lajaunie … WME’s Mark McGrath is 3-0 (h/t Natasha Bertrand) … Chris Weideman …
… Robert Siegel is 72 … Guðni Th. Jóhannesson, president of Iceland, is 51 … Haitian President Jovenel Moise is 51 … Emily McBride, associate director of the Office of Cabinet Affairs in the White House … Strauss Zelnick is 62 … Robert E. Levin … Ross Feinstein, director of operations comms at American Airlines (h/ts Tim Burger and Shannon Gilson) … Rachel Gantz, comms director for the National Pork Producers Council … Judy Havemann, director of public affairs/comms at the National Endowment of the Humanities … Alex Hayden DiLalla of Global Citizen … Graeme Zielinski … Julie Norton … Alan Solow is 65 … Elisabeth Cholnoky … Joannie Braden … Jan Burmeister … Preeya Noronha Pinto … Kathleen Falk (h/t Teresa Vilmain)
A message from Blue Cross Blue Shield Association:
Generic drugs are up to 85% cheaper than brand name medicines andhave saved American consumers $1.67 trillion over 10 years. the bipartisan solutions that can be enacted right now to bring more lower-cost generics to patients.
- Anna Palmer @apalmerdc
- Jake Sherman @JakeSherman
- Daniel Lippman @dlippman
THE RESURGENT
The Resurgent’s Morning Briefing for June 26,2019
View this email in your browser
Share
Tweet
Forward
Good morning, Here is all the news conservatives need to know to start their day. At 4pm ET, you can catch me on radio to bring you up to speed on developments throughout the day. You can listen live here. Republicans and Reporters Should Treat WinRed With Caution Republicans need to treat this very, very skeptically. It just sounds scammy to me. It does not protect data or privacy. It does not financially benefit small dollar donors. In fact, it screws them. It operates as a for profit entity. A lot of people not named Trump are going to get amazingly rich off the President and other candidates through this platform. I suspect this is going to be the financial equivalent of Romney’s Project ORCA where Election Day comes and the consultants are swimming Scrooge McDuck style through their swimming pools of cash while the NRCC, NRSC, and over 500 candidates are wondering what happened to all the money and donors as everything around them crashes. The post Republicans and Reporters Should Treat WinRed With Caution appeared first on The Resurgent. Read in browser » Progressives Attack Wayfair to Make Migrants Sleep on Concrete Floors President Trump ordered bedding products from the company Wayfair to provide bedding in detention facilities at the border. Progressives sprung into action, but not to help get the relief there ASAP. Instead, they sprung into action to get Wayfair employees to walk off the job. They don’t actually want to provide bedding for the migrants. They want them to be on concrete floors in discomfort. This is insane. The post Progressives Attack Wayfair to Make Migrants Sleep on Concrete Floors appeared first on The Resurgent. Read in browser » Nepotism Benefited Jerry Falwell, Jr., Who Now Attacks A Man Without Daddy Issues or a Pool Boy It is worth noting that Falwell is the beneficiary of his father’s nepotism. Falwell now presides over the university his father started and shares his father’s name to give himself clout within the Christian community. In fact, a lot of people forget Falwell is not a pastor because they connect his name to his father. Russell Moore, on the other hand, advanced up the ranks of the Southern Baptist Convention on his own merit where he now occupies a position of moral clarity and compassion for the Southern Baptist Convention. Jerry Falwell, Jr. has not so much advanced up any ranks as he’s knelt close to tables hoping for scraps to be thrown his direction. Also, Russell Moore doesn’t have a pool boy. The post Nepotism Benefited Jerry Falwell, Jr., Who Now Attacks A Man Without Daddy Issues or a Pool Boy appeared first on The Resurgent. Read in browser » A Christian Response to Taylor Swift’s LGBT-Promoting Video Generally speaking, the entertainment industry is no friend to Christians attempting to raise their children to resist worldly conformity and embrace Godliness. Taylor Swift’s recently released Christian-mocking, LGBT-affirming anthem You Need to Calm Down is the latest example. The 29-year-old pop sensation brings together a cast of colorful celebrity collaborators to depict those who would […] The post A Christian Response to Taylor Swift’s LGBT-Promoting Video appeared first on The Resurgent. Read in browser » A Leftist website calls U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum statement a “dreadful intervention”. In responding to AOC’s concentration camp comment, the USHMM is attacked by the website Splinter. In the 703rd episode of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez inviting controversy, this time by calling CBP detention camps “concentration camps”, there has been groups on both sides wading into the debate. Those on the Left have nodded right along with AOC […] The post A Leftist website calls U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum statement a “dreadful intervention”. appeared first on The Resurgent. Read in browser » Deportation Objections Are Part of a Bigger Strategy Speaker Nancy Pelosi says a lot of strange things. She also says a whole lot of things that are partially true or not true at all. Here is the latest example: Where to begin. Let’s start here. The Trump administration was very clear about the individuals that ICE was going to pick up during the […] The post Deportation Objections Are Part of a Bigger Strategy appeared first on The Resurgent. Read in browser » Jay Inslee Will Solve the Border Crisis By Fighting Climate Change The post Jay Inslee Will Solve the Border Crisis By Fighting Climate Change appeared first on The Resurgent. Read in browser » America Can—and Should—Do Better Congress must act, quickly, to provide humanitarian relief at Border Patrol detention facilities. The post America Can—and Should—Do Better appeared first on The Resurgent. Read in browser » Tlaib Suggests ‘Direct Payment’ as Reparations (h/t NicholasBallasy) The post Tlaib Suggests ‘Direct Payment’ as Reparations appeared first on The Resurgent. Read in browser » Why Won’t Dems Release Their Supreme Court List? The post Why Won’t Dems Release Their Supreme Court List? appeared first on The Resurgent. Read in browser » Recent Items: Remember, you can listen to the Erick Erickson Show anytime and anywhere via WSB Radio, iTunes, Stitcher, and Soundcloud. As always, you can find pretty much anything and everything I’m writing about throughout the day via The Resurgent. Thanks for reading and tuning in. Erick Erickson THE RESURGENT Facebook Twitter Instagram Copyright © 2019 The Resurgent Media Group, LLC, All rights reserved. unsubscribe from this list update subscription preferences |
THE HILL
© Getty Images Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Happy Wednesday! Our newsletter gets you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Co-creators are Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver (CLICK HERE to subscribe!). On Twitter, find us at @asimendinger and @alweaver22. |
The first night of the Democratic presidential debates has arrived and all eyes are on Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who will be center stage on Wednesday night as she looks to continue her rise in the pecking order of 2020 Democrats and make her presence felt with voters and her opponents in Miami. The lead-up to Wednesday night’s debate has been ideal for Warren, who has been on helium watch for the past month as she has seen her stock rise and surpass Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) in some polls. As Jonathan Easley and Amie Parnes write, Warren will be the only top-tier candidate on the stage on Wednesday as she shares center stage with former Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D-Texas), who has seen his stock plummet since he entered the race and posted a massive fundraising haul. Some believe that being the only candidate polling in double digits on stage could be of detriment. However, she is known as a tough debater who has the ability to command a room, just as she does at her campaign rallies. “Warren has one of the easier debate strategies because what she’s been doing on the campaign trail is already working, so just needs to keep doing that,” said Democratic strategist Eddie Vale. “A lot of people will be turning in for the first time so she just needs to keep telling her great policy ideas interwoven with her bio and personal stories like she has been on the trail.” While Warren will be on stage, Wednesday’s debate could be as much about who isn’t on stage. Former Vice President Joe Biden isn’t slated to debate until Thursday night, but he has found himself in the crosshairs of two of the main candidates at tonight’s debate. In recent weeks, Warren has hit him for his stance with credit card companies, while Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) got into a tussle with the former vice president last week over his past work with segregationist Dixiecrat senators in the late 1970s. Biden will loom large without being on stage Wednesday night as he continues to lead nationally and in all of the early primary states, while showing an ability to parry attacks and avoid much of a dent in his support. Outside of the top candidates, the debates provide an opportune moment for candidates who have been unable to bust out of the low single digits and barely register in polls to make a name for themselves. As Max Greenwood and Julia Manchester write, it will be a big challenge for these candidates to make their mark with standout performances. While the mountain for the candidates to climb is steep, many of them have nothing to lose at this point, and as the boxing analogy goes, a fighter with nothing to lose is a dangerous fighter, creating a sense of unease and volatility that could be on display in Miami. The Washington Post: ‘Looking for fireworks’: How 2016 — and Trump — ushered in the era of the mega-debate. The New York Times: Is Cory Booker too nice? (And is that bad?) The Wall Street Journal: Debates put Democratic National Committee back in the spotlight. The Associated Press: Zingers, breakouts and burns. What to watch in the debates. Politico: Team Trump plans debate night offensive. Karen Tumulty: Kamala Harris steps out of her comfort zone — and it works. |
© Getty Images |
LEADING THE DAY |
CONGRESS & INVESTIGATIONS: Former special counsel Robert Mueller has agreed to publicly testify to Congress on July 17 about his report on Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, the House Judiciary and Intelligence committees announced Tuesday night (The Hill). Mueller previously said he would testify only to what is in the 400-page report released nearly three months ago, but his public presentation has the potential to reshape the political landscape around Trump’s reelection bid and a possible impeachment inquiry in the Democrat-controlled House (The New York Times). > Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is giving 2020 White House hopefuls a choice: Show up in the Senate to vote or hit the presidential campaign trail, reports Jordain Carney. The Senate is moving forward with a mammoth defense bill and potentially a heated fight over President Trump’s ability to take military action against Iran, even as Democratic senators who are also candidates are in Miami today and Thursday for presidential debates. It’s one of the first high-profile examples of the crowded 2020 contest spilling over into the day-to-day running of the Senate, where seven lawmakers are competing for the Democratic nomination. McConnell has relished the juggling act, taking multiple opportunities to hit Democrats over missed votes. “Some of our Democratic friends need to go hit the presidential campaign trail. They can’t be here because they have to go campaign. Not one day but two. …They’re too busy to stay in the Senate and authorize the resources that our all-volunteer armed forces rely on,” McConnell said on the floor of the Senate. |
© Getty Images > Democratic leadership: It’s more than a year away from leadership elections, but House Democrats are already jockeying for position to eventually takeover the speakership and the upper rungs on the leadership ladder. Although everything depends on what happens next November, House Democrats are trying to put themselves in a position to move up within the conference. Among those looking to move up are Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), the No. 5 House Democrat, Rep. Yvette Clarke (D-N.Y.), Rep. David Cicilline (D-R.I.) and Rep. Primila Jayapal (D-Wash.), the co-chairwoman of the Congressional Progressive Caucus (The Hill). > Drug pricing: The leaders of the Senate Finance Committee are in talks about a potentially sweeping deal to limit drug price increases in Medicare, according to sources familiar with the negotiations. Sen. Ron Wyden (Ore.), the top Democrat on the panel, is pushing the idea to make drug companies pay rebates to Medicare if their prices rise faster than inflation. Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), the chairman, has not ruled the idea out, and discussed it with other Republican senators on the committee in a meeting last week. Some Republicans are pushing back on the far-reaching proposal, arguing it comes too close to price controls for drugs, which Republicans have long opposed. Drug companies are scrambling to figure out what is being discussed (The Hill). The Hill: House approved a $383 billion spending package. *** POLITICS & CAMPAIGNS: Bernie Sanders’s proposal to wipe out $1.6 trillion in student debt has broad support from the public, but it’s making one group uneasy: Democratic lawmakers. Sanders’s plan is expected to increase the pressure on other 2020 Democrats and lawmakers on Capitol Hill, but some are hesitant to do so for fear that they could be branded as socialists by Republicans who are hungry to lob the attack at any turn. However, dismissing Sanders out of hand will be tough for Democratic leaders, as he remains a popular figure in the party despite not being a Democrat (The Hill). > The president made a pair of high-profile endorsements on the Senate map Tuesday, giving his official blessing to Sen. Martha McSally (R-Ariz.) and Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), both of whom are considered among the most vulnerable Senate Republicans up for reelection in 2020. After losing to Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) last November, McSally took up the remainder of the late Sen. John McCain’s (R-Ariz.) term, but she has a tough road to hoe against Mark Kelly, who is challenging her. Kelly, the husband of former Rep. Gabby Giffords (D-Ariz.), has shown an unparalleled fundraising ability by Democratic challengers for the Senate. One boost for McSally this year is that she is not expected to face as contentious of a primary in 2020. Trump endorsed her in 2018 only after she made it through a three-way primary in mid-August, one of the latest primaries of the year (The Arizona Republic). In North Carolina, Trump endorsed Tillis after Rep. Mark Walker (R-N.C.) decided to forgo a primary bid and as Tillis looks to bring the party behind him in the state despite poor polling numbers at this early stage. In two polls released in recent weeks, Tillis trails two of his Democratic challengers, including state Sen. Erica Smith by seven points (The Hill). |
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES |
WHITE HOUSE & ADMINISTRATION: The Trump administration’s much-criticized care of migrant children detained at the U.S. southern border, described by lawyers as “inhumane” at one Customs and Border Protection facility near El Paso, stirred House Democrats into adopting new requirements on Tuesday inserted into a $4.5 billion funding measure the House passed late on Tuesday (The Hill). Earlier in the day, the House Appropriations Committee unveiled a set of changes to accommodate concerns, especially among progressive and Latino lawmakers, about conditions at the border, adding detailed standards to ensure that migrants held in detention facilities have access to adequate food, shelter, hygiene and translators following reports of unsanitary and overcrowded conditions. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) agreed to the added language to gain support before the final 230-195 vote along party lines. With the clock ticking before lawmakers expect to leave Washington before a July 4th recess, the measure faces a veto threat from the White House and an uphill battle in the Senate, which has its own bill to address issues at the southern border (The Associated Press). Department of Homeland Security: At the same time that lawmakers reacted to bleak headlines describing federal facilities for migrants, Customs and Border Protection Acting Commissioner John Sanders announced his resignation effective July 5 amid the uproar (The Associated Press). Sanders said last week that detention conditions for migrants that are intended to be temporary had become longer-lasting in part because of holdups in appropriations and a surge in migrants that caused overcrowding. Sanders is expected to be replaced by Mark Morgan, who has been leading Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) since the spring. Morgan is seen as an outspoken supporter of Trump’s hardline immigration enforcement policies (USA Today). House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) assailed the administration for creating what he described as “chaos” at DHS and for immigration policies he said are cruel and abhorrent.” At the same time that conditions are described as unhealthy for migrant children, administration officials have said they want to send a message to immigrants in Central American countries not to try to come to the United States because their stays will be short and the conditions difficult. In an exclusive interview with The Hill on Monday, Trump defended migrant detention conditions on his watch, arguing they are “better than they were under President Obama” (The Hill). The Hill: Full text of the Trump interview, plus video from Hill.TV. The New York Times: Migrant children moved back to troubled Texas border facility. The Hill: ICE chief Morgan’s view: “Lawmakers failed us.”> Iran: Days after saying he does not want war and prefers diplomatic discussions with Tehran, Trump threatened on Tuesday to obliterate parts of Iran if it attacks “anything American,” after Tehran said new U.S. sanctions shredded any chance of diplomacy, calling White House actions “mentally retarded” (Reuters). Meanwhile, McConnell opened the door to a Senate vote on Iran and war authorization (The Hill). > Group of 20 Summit: Trump departs for Osaka, Japan, this afternoon to participate in the annual G-20 economic summit this weekend. Some analysts have dubbed the gathering “G-2” because of the planned meeting between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Trump to try to jump-start trade talks between the two governments. Among the sticking points: the United States has told China it will not forfeit its option to impose tariffs as part of any agreement that may be reached on trade (Reuters). In Japan, the president will also meet one-on-one with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan of Turkey. The president will fly to South Korea on Saturday to meet with President Moon Jae-in before he flies back to Washington late Sunday. The United States and North Korea are in talks to set up a third summit meeting about denuclearization between Trump and Kim Jong Un, according to Moon (Reuters). > West Wing staff news: Trump and the first lady selected Stephanie Grisham, Melania Trump’s tough-minded communications director, to replace Sarah Huckabee Sanders as White House press secretary and communications director (The Hill). The hybrid role sketched out for the East Wing loyalist who began volunteering in Trump’s campaign in 2015 suggests the president will continue to steer his own communications strategy. The Hill: Who is Grisham? Politico: Trump is tiring of acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney. |
© Getty Images |
OPINION |
Iran’s got 99 problems, and that’s an opportunity, by James Durso, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2X5rHxW Democrats’ debates risk ‘McGoverning’ their own nominee, by Bob Lehrman, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2LpT4f9 |
WHERE AND WHEN |
Hill.TV’s “Rising” program features Roland Martin, the host and managing editor of “Roland Martin Unfiltered,” to discuss the Democratic primary debate, and Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.), who looks ahead at Medicare’s future and Democrats’ policy ideas at 9 a.m. ET at http://thehill.com/hilltv or on YouTube at 10 a.m. at Rising on YouTube. The House meets at 10 a.m. The Homeland Security Committee holds a hearing at 10 a.m. with representatives of Facebook, Google and Twitter to examine “social media companies’ efforts to counter online terror content and misinformation.” The Senate convenes at 10 a.m. and resumes consideration of the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal 2020. The president speaks at 11 a.m. to the Faith and Freedom Coalition Road to Majority Policy Conference in Washington. Trump departs the nation’s capital at 1 p.m. to attend the Group of 20 economic summit in Osaka, Japan, later this week. Vice President Pence participates in a ceremonial swearing-in for U.S. Ambassador to Ireland Edward Crawford at 2 p.m. Pence holds a bilateral meeting with Nigeria’s vice president, Oluyemi Oluleke Osinbajo, at 3 p.m. in the Roosevelt Room. Attorney General William Barr addresses the U.S. Attorneys’ National Conference at 9 a.m. at the Department of Justice. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin speaks at 8:15 a.m. in Bahrain at the Peace to Prosperity Summit’s panel discussion with finance ministers about economic transformation. The conversation is live streamed. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is in India where he meets with Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The Supreme Court will return to the bench at 10 a.m. to hand down rulings in some of the eight cases remaining this term. The Hill at 8:30 a.m. hosts a “Future of Healthcare Summit,” which explores some of the biggest questions in health care with policymakers, health officials and industry leaders. Speakers include Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.); Dr. Amy Abernethy from the Food and Drug Administration; Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, who advised the Obama administration during enactment of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act; and Steve Papermaster, the CEO of Nano Vision. Location: Long View Gallery in Washington, D.C. Information is HERE. ★ The Hill’s “Future of Healthcare Special Report” is HERE. ★ |
ELSEWHERE |
➔ U.S. Census: A federal appeals court on Tuesday allowed a district judge to reopen a case related to the origin of the Trump administration’s proposed addition of a citizenship question on the 2020 census, which raised the prospect that the federal government might be unable to meet a deadline for completing census questionnaires that include the question. The development threw the controversial issue into turmoil just as the Supreme Court was expected to issue a ruling on the dispute this week (The New York Times). ➔ United Kingdom: Either Boris Johnson or Jeremy Hunt will be announced as Great Britain’s new prime minister on July 23 (Reuters). ➔ State/City Watch: Illinois became the 11th state in the country to legalize recreational marijuana and only the second to do so through the state legislature and not in an election (The Associated Press) … Mitsubishi announced it is moving its U.S. headquarters from California to Tennessee (The Associated Press) … San Francisco on Tuesday became the first city to adopt a ban on e-cigarette sales (CNN). |
THE CLOSER |
And finally … The city of Pascagoula, Miss., celebrated some unusual history last weekend, dedicating a historical marker at Lighthouse Park on the shores of the Pascagoula River. The occasion? The community marked the spot where Charles Hickson and Calvin Parker claimed in 1973 to be abducted by what they described as aliens that approached them while they were fishing. They said they were lifted aboard a UFO, examined by a machine shaped like a football-sized eyeball and by three robots, and then returned to Earth unharmed (The Clarion Ledger). Hickson, then 42, and Parker, then 19, reported their experiences to the local sheriff’s department immediately on Oct. 11, 1973, and the pair were examined at a local hospital. Hickson died in 2011, and Parker published a book last year recounting an alien abduction tale that made the rounds worldwide for decades (The Associated Press). |
© Twitter The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE! |
To view past editions of The Hill’s Morning Report CLICK HERE To receive The Hill’s Morning Report in your inbox SIGN UP HERE |
Morning Report Sign Up FORWARD Morning Report |
Privacy Policy | Manage Subscriptions | Unsubscribe Email to a friend | Sign Up for Other Newsletters The Hill 1625 K Street, NW 9th Floor, Washington DC 20006 ©2019 Capitol Hill Publishing Corp., a subsidiary of News Communications, Inc. |
THE BLAZE
© 2019 Blaze Media LLC. All Rights Reserved. |
You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive emails from Blaze Media. |
Privacy Policy | Manage your preferences | Unsubscribe |
8275 S. Eastern Ave, Ste 200-245 |
Las Vegas, Nevada, 89123, USA |
CDN MORNING NEWS BLAST
CDN’s Daily News Blast delivers the day’s news first!
View this email in your browser
CDN Daily News Blast
06/26/2019
Excerpts:
Ocasio-Cortez Supports Wayfair Walkout Over Furnishing Migrant Camps
By Shelby Talcott –
Wayfair employees have planned a walkout after learning the online
furnishing company is going to fulfill an order to furnish migrant camps
and Democratic New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is voicing her
support. The retailer is going ahead with a $200,000 bed and furniture
sale to a Texas detention facility. …
Ocasio-Cortez Supports Wayfair Walkout Over Furnishing Migrant Camps is original content from Conservative
Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary
they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political
Cartoons and more.
Read on » ‘F*ck Ice’: Michigan GOP HQ Falls Victim To Vandalism Twice In Two Days By Jake Dima – The Michigan GOP Headquarters was vandalized with explicit graffiti twice in two separate incidents on Saturday morning and Monday night, according to a press release from the group. “FUCK ICE” was spray painted prominently on the front of the building Saturday, the statement said. Another overnight attack Monday left an … ‘F*ck Ice’: Michigan GOP HQ Falls Victim To Vandalism Twice In Two Days is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » Chaos Reigns Ahead Of Supreme Court Ruling On Citizenship Question By Kevin Daley – The Trump administration filed an extraordinary last-minute request at the Supreme Court in the census citizenship question case Tuesday, asking the justices to resolve a late-breaking controversy just hours before handing down their decision. The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals provoked the government’s petition after a Tuesday afternoon ruling, … Chaos Reigns Ahead Of Supreme Court Ruling On Citizenship Question is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » New Jersey Gun Dealers May Soon Sell ‘Smart’ Guns. Here’s What They Are By Whitney Tipton – Democratic New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy is about to sign a law mandating gun dealers carry a “smart gun” model once one becomes commercially available. “Smart Guns” recognize the user and are rendered inoperable by unauthorized use. While there are a number of “smart guns” being developed by gunmakers, no … New Jersey Gun Dealers May Soon Sell ‘Smart’ Guns. Here’s What They Are is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » More Proof That Google Is Manipulating Our Elections By Frank Salvato – Another piece of evidence that Google (along with other social media giants like Facebook) is more of a threat to our election process here in the United States than the Russians could ever be has surfaced courtesy of Project Veritas – This should piss everyone off. Google’s Head of Responsible … More Proof That Google Is Manipulating Our Elections is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » President Donald Trump’s Schedule for Wednesday, June 26, 2019 By R. Mitchell – President Donald Trump will deliver remarks at the Faith & Freedom Coalition 2019 Road To Majority Policy Conference then travel to Osaka, Japan, ahead of the G20 conference. Keep up with Trump on CDN’s President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s schedule for 6/26/19 All Times EDT: 10:30 AM Depart the White … President Donald Trump’s Schedule for Wednesday, June 26, 2019 is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » REPORT: New Doc Shows Google AI Engineer Calling Ben Shapiro A ‘Nazi Using Dog Whistles’ By Chris White – A new document leaked Tuesday appears to show a Google engineer suggesting in an internal email that classifying prominent conservatives as “Nazis” could help the company wipe out far-right content. “Today it is often 1 or 2 steps to Nazis, if we understand that PragerU, Jordan Peterson, Ben Shapiro et … REPORT: New Doc Shows Google AI Engineer Calling Ben Shapiro A ‘Nazi Using Dog Whistles’ is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » Omarosa Sued For Failing To File Financial Disclosures After White House Ouster By Chuck Ross – The Justice Department on Tuesday sued Omarosa Manigault-Newman for failing to file financial disclosures after she was fired from her White House position in December 2017. In the complaint, Assistant Attorney General Joseph Hunt said that Manigault-Newman violated the Ethics in Government Act by “knowingly and willfully” failing to file … Omarosa Sued For Failing To File Financial Disclosures After White House Ouster is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » Two Anti-Trump Fox Reporters Question Trump’s Switch on Iran Attack By Jim Clayton – Donald Trump made a major decision to call off a planned military strike on Iran that may have been the most consequential decision of Trump’s presidency. But two anti-trump Fox News hosts Shep Smith and Chris Wallace just issued this one unthinkable challenge to President Trump. Hawks – led by … Two Anti-Trump Fox Reporters Question Trump’s Switch on Iran Attack is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » Immigration Shakeup: CBP And ICE Appointed New Chiefs On Same Day By Jason Hopkins – Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) will both be getting new leaders, marking the latest shakeup within the immigration agencies. Mark Morgan, the acting director of ICE, will soon be leading CBP, according to a Tuesday New York Times report. Deputy ICE Director Matthew Albence … Immigration Shakeup: CBP And ICE Appointed New Chiefs On Same Day is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » More Illegal Immigrants Turned Away As Mexico Ramps Up Enforcement | By Matt M. Miller – Mexico’s deployment of National Guardsmen and other ground troops on the U.S.-Mexico border has already begun to disrupt the movement of migrants. The inflow of Central American migrants into the U.S. has been stunted following the deployment of several thousand ground troops on Mexico’s northern and southern borders, The New … More Illegal Immigrants Turned Away As Mexico Ramps Up Enforcement | is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » How Stupid Can You Get? By Amanda Alverez – Asking some people, “How stupid can you get,” may create many conversations. Does anyone remember when parents taught their children, “better to be thought a fool than to speak and remove all doubt?” Unfortunately, it’s not any longer just children making fools of themselves. Nope, in today’s ‘enlightened’ elite Ivy … How Stupid Can You Get? is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » ‘Time Is Running Out’: Schiff Hopes To Decide On Mueller Subpoena This Week By Chuck Ross – The chairmen of the House Judiciary and House Intelligence Committees hope to decide this week whether to subpoena former special counsel Robert Mueller, California Rep. Adam Schiff said on Tuesday. “We need to resolve this this week, and I hope we will. One way or another, he needs to come … ‘Time Is Running Out’: Schiff Hopes To Decide On Mueller Subpoena This Week is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » Chip Roy Proposes Obama’s Border Policy As Democrats Postpone Vote Indefinitely By Molly Prince – Republican Texas Rep. Chip Roy offered former President Barack Obama’s border supplement on Monday evening as an amendment to the Democrat-backed border supplemental appropriations bill. “I am asking you to consider an amendment that reflects the language that President Obama sent of $762.8 million to fund ICE so they can … Chip Roy Proposes Obama’s Border Policy As Democrats Postpone Vote Indefinitely is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » ICE HSI Philadelphia Announces Seizure of Over 17 Tons of Cocaine By R. Mitchell – On June 21, 2019, Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Philadelphia and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) hosted a joint press conference at the U.S. Custom House in Philadelphia to announce the multi-agency seizure of over 17 tons of cocaine with an estimated street value of about $1.1 billion. The press … ICE HSI Philadelphia Announces Seizure of Over 17 Tons of Cocaine is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » Trump Taps First Lady’s Aide to be White House Press Secretary By Thomas Anderson – A top aide to First Lady Melania Trump will be the next White House press secretary and communications director. Stephanie Grisham will replace outgoing Secretary Sarah Sanders who is set to leave the position Friday, but according to the first lady’s tweet, she will still be working the East Wing … Trump Taps First Lady’s Aide to be White House Press Secretary is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » Customs And Border Protection Chief To Step Down By Jason Hopkins – Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Acting Commissioner John Sanders will be resigning from his position in the coming days. Sanders will be officially leaving his position atop CBP on July 5, the agency confirmed to the Daily Caller News Foundation on Tuesday. News of the acting commissioner’s imminent departure was … Customs And Border Protection Chief To Step Down is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » Trump On Rising Iran Tensions: ‘No More John Kerry And Obama!’ By Evie Fordham – President Donald Trump said that Iran’s leaders only understand “Strength and Power” and warned “No more John Kerry [and] Obama!” Tuesday on Twitter. “Iran leadership doesn’t understand the words ‘nice’ or ‘compassion,’ they never have. Sadly, the thing they do understand is Strength and Power, and the USA is by … Trump On Rising Iran Tensions: ‘No More John Kerry And Obama!’ is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » Watch Live: Pence speaks at the ‘Latinos for Trump’ coalition launch By R. Mitchell – Vice President Mike Pence delivers remarks to the ‘Latinos for Trump’ coalition launch in Miami, Florida just one day ahead of the first 2020 Democratic debate. The event is scheduled to begin at 11:30 PM EDT. Watch: Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available … Watch Live: Pence speaks at the ‘Latinos for Trump’ coalition launch is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » Americans’ Personal Info Has Been Left Vulnerable To Theft By Several Federal Agencies By Shelby Talcott – Americans’ personal information has been left vulnerable for the past ten years by several federal agencies, according to a report from the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations released Tuesday. The subcommittee spent 10 months investigating multiple federal agencies: the Departments of State, Homeland Security (DHS), Health and Human Services (HHS), Transportation … Americans’ Personal Info Has Been Left Vulnerable To Theft By Several Federal Agencies is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more. Read on » See all breaking news, conservative commentary, political cartoons and more posted to CDN at our Home Page. Follow on Twitter Friend on Facebook Add on Google Plus Copyright © 2019 Conservative Daily News, All rights reserved. Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list |
LIBERTY NATION
Daily Briefing Conservative News | Libertarian News | Commentary VISIT LibertyNation.com FROM OUR NEWSROOM Democrats Prepare for Self-Immolation – Part 1 By Joe Schaeffer The party needs substance, but mediocrity abounds out of the gate. Click Here What America’s Thinking Most Democrats think all hopefuls, not just some, should be in debates. Americans feel safer with public cameras, but some say they’re too nosy. Voters say Healthcare is a primary concern in who they vote for in 2020. Politico/Morning Consult poll puts Biden 19 point ahead of Bernie Sanders. Economic Zombie Virus Coming to a Superpower Near You By Andrew Moran Zero-interest-rate-policy (ZIRP) epidemic unleashes zombie strain on world economies. Click Here Washington Whispers Coming down the pipeline: Robert Mueller has agreed to testify sparking hopes for Democrats of a last-minute impeachment push. Expect fringe candidates to opt for Trump attacks during Democratic Party debates tonight. Will the public backlash over Google censoring videos of Google censoring make it to the mainstream media? IS Oregon Governor really going to arrest GOP members who refuse to vote on climate bill? Madness reigns Supreme in UK as Political Debate Dwindles By Mark Angelides If you think the United States has it bad, you ain’t seen nothing yet. Click Here News Roundup We’ve Surfed The Web for You Let’s Be Honest, Democrats Want Open Borders Waist-Deep in the ‘Big Muddle’ of the Dem Race Secret Service Take Chicago Restaurant Employee into Custody After She Spits on Eric Trump Mexico Confirms U.S. Warned Them About ISIS Suspects Headed To Border Democratic debates could be dull: A crowd in search of a breakthrough UK Health Care Freebies Include Forced Abortion? By Joe Schaeffer In the UK, a disabled woman was denied reproductive rights enjoyed by 14-year-old children. Click Here WATCH NOW FEATURED LNTV |
LNTV: Nebraska Random Drug Tests for Kids – WATCH NOW |
---|
LNTV: Biden: The Polls, the Pundits, and the Propaganda – WATCH NOW |
---|
LNTV Election 2020 Roundtable: The Great Democrat Debate – WATCH NOW Check out one of our podcasts! Subscribe and get notified of new arrivals. SUBSCRIBE Check out one of our videos! View the latest Liberty Nation videos on Vimeo. WATCH NOW |
© 2019 Liberty Nation. All Rights Reserved. |
This email was sent to rickbulow1974@gmail.com
Why did I get this? Unsubscribe from this list. Update subscription preferences. LibertyNation.com is a project of One Generation Away · 1629 K Street NW · Washington, DC 20006 · USA |
BRIGHT
Share with a friend you think would love this! |
Wednesday, June 26, 2019 |
Debate Day Grab the popcorn—tonight at 9pm ET in Miami, Florida, Democrats running for president will duke it out on-stage, arguing about who should be our next president—or more precisely, who is best positioned to beat Donald Trump. Tonight’s debate will feature New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, Former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro, Former Maryland congressman John Delaney, Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, Former Texas congressman Beto O’Rourke, Ohio Rep. Tim Ryan, and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren. You can catch it on NBC News, MSNBC, or Telemundo. Ten other candidates will follow on Thursday night at the same time, and on the same networks. Democrat “bigwigs” are already worried, fearing the debates will “devolve into a horror show,” per Politico. Learn where the candidates stand on the issues at Politico. Wayfair…and the Border Crisis? In an attempt to avert a funding lapse at the federal refugee office that has overseen thousands of unaccompanied children migrating from Central America, Democrats finally agreed to come to the table and make a deal to address the crisis at the border. But for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, convincing the more progressive members of her caucus to get on-board wasn’t easy. This comes—as House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy pointed out — 56 days after the Trump administration asked for emergency funding to address the humanitarian border crisis. “House Dems have blocked the vote 17 times,” he said. And yet, throughout that time, Democrats had no problem complaining about it. Meanwhile, Wayfair employees yesterday staged a walkout after learning |
the company is selling beds to the Trump administration so that
children brought over the border illegally won’t have to sleep on the
floor. The horror! Employees are demanding the company donate all
profits made from the sale to a refugee and immigrant nonprofit. More on
the #WayfairWalkout, which of course AOC called “brave,” over at Bloomberg.
A Fascinating Look Inside China’s ‘Thought Transformation’ Camps
The BBC was given rare access to the vast system of highly secure
“re-education” camps thought to be holding more than a million Muslims
in China’s western region of Xinjiang. China maintains Muslims
voluntarily attend these camps, which exist to combat “extremism” via
“thought transformation,” but human rights groups say they have no
choice in the matter. This video is wild, and the oppression is blatantly clear. Props to The BBC for its great reporting.
A State-Forced Abortion, Averted
At the 11th hour,
appeal judges overturned a decision would have forced an intellectually
disabled woman to abort her 22-week-old child against the wishes of the
unnamed woman, her mother, her family, and her social worker.
According to Sky News,
the pregnant woman was told she would “get a new doll” after being
forced by the United Kingdom to undergo an abortion. Read more about the
horrific case at The Federalist.
‘Foodie Calls’ Are Now a Thing
It’s like a “booty call,” but for food! And it’s a real thing. That is, if you believe this new survey published by the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, which
found that as many as 33 percent of women admit to making a “foodie
call” — AKA setting up a date for the purpose of getting a free meal.
More, from Earth.com:
“The results from the survey showed that most of the women who found
this behavior acceptable scored high on the ‘dark triad’ of personality
traits, including psychopathy, Machiavellianism, and narcissism. The
women who were most likely to make foodie calls also expressed belief in
traditional gender roles.”
“’Several dark traits have been linked to deceptive and exploitative
behavior in romantic relationships, such as one-night stands, faking an
orgasm, or sending unsolicited sexual pictures,’ said study co-author
Brian Collisson.”
IMO, if you’re stuck on a bad date, the least you can get is a good free
meal?! (Or maybe that makes me a horrible person.) Proactively seeking
out a “foodie call,” however, is a whole new level. But hey—it sure as
heck beats a booty call!
And Because It’s Hump Day…
- Stephanie Grisham is now working double-duty as Melania Trump’s communications director *and* White House press secretary.
- Man wins lawsuit against brewery that discounted ‘pink’ beer for females.
- A solid swimsuit at a reasonable price—but it keeps selling out!
- And finally, something that perhaps, we can all get on-board with?! President Trump signs executive order requiring hospitals to disclose in an easy-to-read format what patients pay out of pocket for services.
BRIGHT is brought to you by The Federalist. |
Today’s BRIGHT Editor
Kelsey Bolar is a senior news reporter/producer at The Daily Signal, the multimedia news organization at The Heritage Foundation, and the 2017-2018 Tony Blankley Fellow at The Steamboat Institute. She is also a Visiting Fellow at Independent Women’s Forum. She is a contributor to The Federalist and previously worked at Fox News in New York City. She now lives in Washington, D.C., where she balances her passion for politics with her affinity for yoga and her Australian Shepherd, Utah. Follow her on Twitter @kelseyjharkness and on Instagram @capitalyogagirl. Opinions expressed on this website are her own and not those of any other person or entity. |
Copyright © BRIGHT, All rights reserved. www.GetBRIGHTemail.com Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list |
Note: By using some of the links above, Bright may be compensated through the Amazon Affiliate program and Magic Links. However, none of this content is sponsored and all opinions are our own |
TOWNHALL
FACEBOOK TWITTER |
ADVERTISEMENT |
The Deep State’s 50+ Year Old Scheme to Confiscate Your Savings The 20-year head of the U.S. Fed, Alan Greenspan, has revealed the long-standing, nasty trick to confiscate the savings of unsuspecting Americans… Are you one of them? ==> Here’s the ONE THING Greenspan Says Can Protect Your Savings |
_______SUBSCRIPTION INFO_______
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the Townhall.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately. Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions You can unsubscribe by clicking here. Or Send postal mail to: Townhall Daily Unsubscribe P.O. Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219 * Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers. All rights reserved. |
IJR
MEET THE PRESS
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: What to watch for at tonight’s first debate
MIAMI –The first debates of the 2020 Democratic presidential race are finally here.
Ten candidates – led by Elizabeth Warren, Beto O’Rourke, Amy Klobuchar and Cory Booker – participate tonight beginning at 9:00 pm ET.
And the second 10 – led by Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Kamala Harris and Pete Buttigieg – go on Thursday.
Both two-hour debates will be televised live on NBC, MSNBC and Telemundo, and they will be moderated by Savannah Guthrie of “Today,” Lester Holt of “Nightly News,” Jose Diaz-Balart of Telemundo and NBC, Rachel Maddow of MSNBC and Chuck Todd of “Meet the Press.”
Here’s what we’re watching for tonight:
- How does Warren handle being the night’s frontrunner? The
Massachusetts senator has been moving up in the polls. And without
Biden or
Bernie on the stage, she’s the star attraction – at least on paper.
Maybe Warren’s biggest task is handling the high expectations.
- Who else breaks through — Beto, Booker or Klobuchar? Since
Biden-versus-Bernie is Night Two, at least one of the other candidates
will
shine. Will it be O’Rourke, who has seen his star fade since his entry
in March? Or Booker, who really hasn’t had a moment so far in the 2020
race? Or Klobuchar, who often stands out when she’s on TV.
- Who else has a moment? There
are six other candidates on tonight’s debate stage: Washington Gov. Jay
Inslee, former HUD Secretary Julian
Castro, former Rep. John Delaney, Reps. Tulsi Gabbard and Tim Ryan, and
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio. Remember, these folks are vying to
survive the higher qualifications before September’s third debate(s).
- How long does coverage of Night One last? The biggest disadvantage of going on the first night is that the coverage has a potential shelf life of 24 hours – before the second debate begins. So even if you stand out, does that get overshadowed starting at 9:00 pm ET on Thursday, when Biden, Bernie, Harris and Buttigieg take the stage?
Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Mueller’s crossing
Former special counsel Robert Mueller has agreed to testify in public before the House Intelligence and Judiciary committees on July 17 – after being subpoenaed, per NBC’s Rebecca Shabad and Kristen Welker.
“The [Democratic] chairmen suggested in a letter to Mueller on Tuesday accompanying the subpoena that they understand that Mueller may limit what he plans to share with lawmakers, with Schiff and Nadler writing that they know ‘there are certain sensitivities associated with your open testimony.’”
“Mueller did not want to testify, but will respect the subpoena to testify in open session, Schiff said on ‘The Rachel Maddow Show’ Tuesday night on MSNBC. Mueller’s staff will speak to the committees in a closed session after Mueller’s public testimony.”
AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File
House passes bill addressing border crisis
By a 230-195 vote – mostly along party lines – the Democratic-led House passed legislation last night providing $4.5 billion to address the humanitarian crisis at the border, NBC News reports.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi “has warned that the Senate’s version of the bill, negotiated between Democrats and Republicans, doesn’t provide as many protections for migrants.”
“Pelosi also warned her members, ‘A vote against this bill is a vote for Donald Trump and his inhumane, outside-the-circle of civilized attitude toward the children.’”
The Trump administration’s OMB has recommended Trump to veto the bill because it “does not provide adequate funding to meet the current crisis, and because it contains partisan provisions designed to hamstring the administration’s border enforcement efforts.”
2020 VISION: How the 2020ers have prepared for tonight’s debate
A top aide pointed to Elizabeth Warren’s “campaign schedule as an example of how she’s prepared — she has done 100 town halls, fielded more than 450 voter questions and parried with reporters at 72 post-event media availabilities, according to her campaign,” NBC’s Dareh Gregorian and Ali Vitali write.
“[Beto] O’Rourke told NBC News that he has been preparing by ‘listening to people,’ and his campaign said he has answered nearly 1,500 questions at town halls since the campaign started.”
Cory Booker has taken breaks “to do pushups ‘to keep him motivated,’ a campaign aide said. He’s also done bicep curls in his shirt and tie.”
And as for Amy Klobuchar, NBC’s Jonathan Allen spotted her on her plane ride from DC to Miami: “Didn’t look up from briefing books and index cards but to exchange pleasantries with flight attendant and a few others.”
On the campaign trail today: Before tonight’s debate, Julian Castro and John Delaney hold media avails in Miami… Elizabeth Warren will visit the Homestead child detention center…And Steve Bullock, in Iowa, holds a televised town hall.
DATA DOWNLOAD: And the number of the day is… 3
Three.
That’s the number of Democratic presidential candidates who say they are visiting Homestead, the Miami-area detention center that’s holding groups of migrant children, while they’re in town for the Democratic primary debate.
Elizabeth Warren blasted Homestead as a “prison” during her town hall in Miami last night, telling the crowd she’d visit the center in the hours before she takes the debate stage on Wednesday night. She added that “we have to shut that down and shut it down now.”
Beto O’Rourke had already announced plans to visit the site this Thursday, the day after he joins Warren on the debate stage.
Eric Swalwell tried to visit the center on Monday, but was turned away by an employee.
And a senior Sanders campaign official told NBC News’ Shaquille Brewster Wednesday morning that Jane Sanders, Bernie Sanders’ wife, will head to Homestead as well.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Caban ahead in last night’s Queens DA race
THE LID: Allow me to introduce myself
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when guest star Melissa Holzberg made her debut to talk about the early moves by presidential hopefuls on the airwaves.
ICYMI: News clips you shouldn’t miss
The Associated Press reports that American officials are meeting with North Korea about a third summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
The Washington Post previews President Trump’s G-20 trip.
Two American soldiers were killed in Afghanistan on Wednesday.
A top Iranian official declared the”permanent closure” of diplomacy between his country and America after the latest round of sanctions were announced.
Thanks for reading.
If you’re a fan, please forward this to a friend. They can sign up
here.
We love hearing from our readers, so shoot us a line here with your comments and suggestions.
Thanks,
Chuck, Mark and Ben
NOQ REPORT DAILY
NOQ Report Daily
Inbox | x |
Conservative Christian News Unsubscribe | 8:52 AM (14 minutes ago) |
to me |
NOQ Report Daily |
- Mainstream media censors images of dead bodies when convenient
- Ami Horowitz: What is the Muslim Brotherhood?
- AOTR 06-24-19: PolitiBunny joins Rick on KOKC 95.3FM, 1520AM
- The only 6 Democrats running that can think for themselves
- The one question the GOP does not want Mueller to answer
- Russia threatens new crisis in Cuba as warship harbors in Havana
- Census: Sanctuary cities are reaping what they sow
- Imagine the Left being completely honest
- Demise of LifeWay: Changing times or because they peddled heresy?
Mainstream media censors images of dead bodies when convenient Posted: 26 Jun 2019 05:19 AM PDT It isn’t common for mainstream media to post images of dead bodies. It has been considered bad form to show images of human death for decades, but there are times when the media is willing to make an exception. If you see a dead body in a newspaper, on television, or on a mainstream media […] The post Mainstream media censors images of dead bodies when convenient appeared first on Conservative Christian News. |
Ami Horowitz: What is the Muslim Brotherhood? Posted: 26 Jun 2019 04:16 AM PDT For an organization that is so wide-reaching, so prominent, and so recognizable across the globe, very little is known about the Muslim Brotherhood by most Americans. They’re an 800-lb gorilla disguised as a harmless puppy that may occasionally bark or growl but can’t do any real damage. The more we learn about their decades of […] The post Ami Horowitz: What is the Muslim Brotherhood? appeared first on Conservative Christian News. |
AOTR 06-24-19: PolitiBunny joins Rick on KOKC 95.3FM, 1520AM Posted: 26 Jun 2019 01:27 AM PDT Occasionally I have the honor of hosting an afternoon talk radio show on KOKC 1520 AM and 95.3 FM. in Oklahoma City. During this interview, we talk with Sam Janney who you may know on Twitter as @PolitiBunny. On this interview, we talk about the life of a Twitchy editor. Before we get to that […] The post AOTR 06-24-19: PolitiBunny joins Rick on KOKC 95.3FM, 1520AM appeared first on Conservative Christian News. |
The only 6 Democrats running that can think for themselves Posted: 26 Jun 2019 01:03 AM PDT Socialism is often a hive mind, as we see every Leftist outlet have the same take on a story, same arguments for a position, and the overall same mission. Conformity is the end goal; to Leftist-Socialism we will conform, if they have their way. In conformity, deviant thinking is often punished, as we saw how […] The post The only 6 Democrats running that can think for themselves appeared first on Conservative Christian News. |
The one question the GOP does not want Mueller to answer Posted: 25 Jun 2019 08:56 PM PDT This is not going to go as Democrats have planned. It never seems to work out for them, lately. Mueller will only repeat what he already wrote in the report. It will be highly publicized, heavily watched, and totally disappointing to the left. Unless he answers one question. Before explaining what that question is, here’s […] The post The one question the GOP does not want Mueller to answer appeared first on Conservative Christian News. |
Russia threatens new crisis in Cuba as warship harbors in Havana Posted: 25 Jun 2019 07:24 PM PDT Russia is revving up the engines of the new Cold War as it sends a state-of-the-art warship armed with cruise missiles to Havana, Cuba, around 90 miles from the shores of Florida. This latest provocation marks the closest Russia has come to garnering a response from the United States over its combative measures to counter […] The post Russia threatens new crisis in Cuba as warship harbors in Havana appeared first on Conservative Christian News. |
Census: Sanctuary cities are reaping what they sow Posted: 25 Jun 2019 06:37 PM PDT Whether or not the census should include a citizenship question is a debate currently raging in our country, but few are stopping to realize that the behavior of sanctuary cities has led to this near inevitable juncture. All cursory arguments aside, the reality is that sanctuary cities are flipping the proverbial bird at federal law. […] The post Census: Sanctuary cities are reaping what they sow appeared first on Conservative Christian News. |
Imagine the Left being completely honest Posted: 25 Jun 2019 06:28 PM PDT The Left has to hide its core ‘value’ of forced wealth redistribution in order to survive, but imagine if the whole truth came out. No one would support the Left’s socialistic slavery if it were truthful about its ideology of forced wealth redistribution. They will, however admit to some half-truths using the sin of omission […] The post Imagine the Left being completely honest appeared first on Conservative Christian News. |
Demise of LifeWay: Changing times or because they peddled heresy? Posted: 25 Jun 2019 12:11 PM PDT It’s not the best of times to be a book store in 2019. Amazon crushed much of the competition. Still, Lifeway remained the retail branch of the Southern Baptist Convention until its announced closure of all of its stores back in March. The brand will continue to operate online. The SBC is embattled with confusion […] The post Demise of LifeWay: Changing times or because they peddled heresy? appeared first on Conservative Christian News. |
You are subscribed to email updates from Conservative Christian News. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
REALCLEARPOLITICS
06/26/2019 Share: Carl Cannon’s Morning Note 2020 Long Shots; Crime Bill; Boardwalk Treat By Carl M. Cannon on Jun 26, 2019 09:02 am Good morning, it’s Wednesday, June 26, 2019. On this date in 1870, the first section of the boardwalk was completed in Atlantic City, N.J. Earlier that year, Alexander Boardman, a conductor on the Atlantic City-Camden rail line, fretted about the sand that beachgoing passengers were tracking into his railroad cars. Local hotelier Jacob Keim was confronting the same issue at his establishment, so the two conjured up a possible solution — a wooden boardwalk — which they pitched to the city council. In this case, government did its job. In a moment, we’ll explore the results of this project, with help from the Library of Congress. First, I’d point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion columns spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters and contributors, including the following: * * * Pretenders or Contenders: Why Do Long Shots Run? Julia Mullins and Jack Beyrer explore the motivations of presidential candidates with little chance of success. They’ll get a rare moment in the spotlight as the first Democratic debate is held the next two nights. Biden Defends ’94 Crime Bill as Trump Rights Its Wrongs. Kelly Sadler weighs in on an issue that continues to plague the former senator and vice president. Marijuana Legalization Policy Must Include Social Justice. Maritza Perez argues in RealClearPolicy that windfalls from taxing recreational pot sales should benefit the needy. FDIC “Chokepoint” Settlement Doesn’t Make Victims Whole. In RealClearMarkets, C. Boyden Gray takes issue with the resolution to a lawsuit regarding government efforts to cut off banking services to legitimate businesses. Another Study Finds Huge Benefits from GM Crops. RealClearScience editor Ross Pomeroy has the details. How Not to Get Lost in the Woods. Reuben Brody offers advice in RealClearLife after recent high-profile cases of hikers going MIA. * * * Atlantic City was originally envisioned as a health resort, and by the mid-1850s it was in full swing. The addition of the boardwalk made it complete. “Beautiful beaches, fresh sea air, luxurious hotels, fine restaurants, alluring shops, and a connecting railroad line from Camden, New Jersey, drew visitors from all over the world,” notes the Library of Congress. The LOC also opines that any consideration of the famed boardwalk “demands at least a nod to saltwater taffy,” so let’s do so. Hurricane Sandy wasn’t the first storm that wreaked havoc on the Jersey Shore, and it won’t be the last. In 1883, it seems, rough weather created conditions resulting in the region’s famed saltwater taffy. According to the Atlantic City public library, by 1880 — 10 years after the boardwalk was built — a taffy confection was being sold on the boardwalk by two proprietors: Windle W. Hollis and two brothers with the last name Ritchie. Taffy was a Midwestern invention, and its popularity at the beach wasn’t anything to write home about. But “saltwater” taffy — what’s the story there? Local lore holds that a small boardwalk sweets shop owned by a merchant named David Bradley was flooded by wind-driven high tides in an August 1883 storm. The next morning, as he surveyed the damage, a little girl walking by with her mother asked him for taffy. “You mean saltwater taffy?” Mr. Bradley is alleged to have replied ruefully, thinking of his ruined stock. But the girl took a bite, and liked it, telling her mother, “He called it ‘saltwater taffy.'” The name, along with a new recipe, caught on. Whether that legend is literally true or not, the next summer a merchant named Joseph Fralinger opened a cigar store and lemonade stand in Atlantic City, and by 1885 he was boxing and selling taffy there, too. By 1889 Windle Hollis was selling the sugary confection under the name “Original Salt Water Taffy.” He had plenty of company, including from Enoch James and his brother, and the product soon became associated with the Jersey Shore itself. In 1923, an enterprising New Jersey candy seller named John Ross Edmiston claimed to have been the first to develop saltwater taffy — and he managed to trademark the name. What he was after were royalties from his competitors. He was promptly sued by other merchants, resulting in a reversal by the U.S. Patent Office, which had registered the term. In the ensuing legal appeal, John Edmiston lost; saltwater taffy belongs to anyone on the shore who deigns to sell it — or buy it. Carl M. Cannon Washington Bureau chief, RealClearPolitics @CarlCannon (Twitter) ccannon@realclearpolitics.com Having trouble viewing this email? | [Unsubscribe] | Update Subscription Preferences Copyright © 2019 RealClearHoldings, All rights reserved. You are receiving this email becuase you opted in at our website. Our mailing address is: RealClearHoldings666 Dundee RoadBldg. 600Northbrook, IL 60062 Add us to your address book |
AMERICAN THINKER
View this email in your browser
Recent Articles
Dossier 2.0 — Mueller’s ‘Black Cash’ Ledger
Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am Robert Mueller has not been honest with the American people about the alleged Manafort ledger. Read More… Understanding Leftists in Three Easy Steps Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am America is fighting a culture war and the Progressive Left is the aggressor. Read More… Geoff Shepard, Buttoned Down Watergate Demolition Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am Geoff Shepard has the goods on the prosecutorial and judicial misconduct that railroaded Richard Nixon out of office. Read More… Making LGBT a Protected Class Will Kill Religious Liberty Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am The push to redefine LGBT status as a protected class is about taking away the freedoms of religious believers who refuse to deny what we all know about the facts of life. Read More… Islamic Subversion in America Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am What Islam did to Iran is a sign of what Islam wants to do to the entire world. Read More… PTSD, Veterans, and a Tired System Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am Since being elected, President Donald Trump has followed through on many of the promises made to veterans. Read More… Recent Blog Posts Lefty logic: Wayfair’s employees decide to stop shipping beds to migrants in detention centers to … help them? Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am Virtue-signaling leads a hipster bed company to a very strange place… Read more… E. Jean Carroll’s fluttering pulse Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am E. Jean hangs out the dirty lingerie. Read more… Dallas Muslim Brotherhood supporters openly mourn Morsi’s death Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am Islamists are completely open about where they stand. Read more… Will the Harvey Weinsteins of the world’s work survive #MeToo? Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am Lechery and lechers haven’t gone away. They’re just in the shadows for now. Read more… Supreme Court saves WWI cross but muddies the Establishment Clause waters Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am If Establishment Clause law was confusing before, it is now downright baffling. Read more… Capitolism: The defining issue of the 2020 elections Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am There is a vast chasm in America today — a division not by class, but rather by geography, by physical proximity to power. Read more… National Assn of Scholars backs Raymond Ibrahim against Muslim pressure group in open letter to President Trump Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am The signatories call President Trump’s attention to the U.S. Army War College’s recent capitulation to CAIR and Linda Sarsour. Read more… Mayor Pete’s virtue-signaling on race riles South Bend’s police Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am Maybe this is what happens when everyone in your party panders about race. Read more… California Wildfire season begins with state still blaming climate change Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am Newson’s go-to excuse for doing nothing. Read more… The Curmudgeon and the Communist Jun 26, 2019 01:00 am The Democrats only have two real candidates for president. Read more… Democrats make a big stink about census citizenship question but guess who’s really politically motivated? Jun 25, 2019 01:00 am Let’s talk about ‘politically motivated’ as we consider the Democrats’s curious conversion to open borders… Read more… E. Jean Carroll loses more credibility … and CNN tries to cover it up, twice Jun 25, 2019 01:00 am Has CNN found itself a new Avenatti? Read more… A possible Trump strategy if Iran closes the Strait of Hormuz Jun 25, 2019 01:00 am The most obvious, yet surprising, option. Read more… As Pelosi’s Democrats yell about soap and toothbrushes, migrants empty out Western Unions Jun 25, 2019 01:00 am Could the migrants pulling out $25,000 withdrawals from Western Union maybe be asked to pay for their own soap and toothbrushes? Read more… Pelosi on enforcing immigration law: ‘What’s the point?’ Jun 25, 2019 01:00 am Anarchy beckons… with the support of the highest ranking elected Democrat. Read more… View this email in your browser American Thinker is a daily internet publication devoted to the thoughtful exploration of issues of importance to Americans. |
This email was sent to rickbulow74@live.com
why did I get this? unsubscribe from this list update subscription preferences AmericanThinker · 3060 El Cerrito Plaza, #306 · El Cerrito, CA 94530 · USA |
SEAN HANNITY
Wed, June 26 |
GRAHAM ON MUELLER TESTIMONY // CRUZ ON FIRE |
GRAHAM: Dems will SORELY Regret Mueller Testimony: ‘This Will Blow Up in Their Faces’ Former special counsel Robert Mueller has agreed to testify before Congress after being subpoenaed by both the House Judiciary and House Intelligence committees.The subpoenas were issued Tuesday night for Mueller to appear at an open session on July 17th.Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, appeared on “Hannity”… |
TECH TAKEOVER? Read Over 60 ‘Fascinating Statistics’ on Google’s Controversial Search Engine Google and other American tech companies were thrust into the national spotlight in recent weeks, with critics claiming the platforms are intentionally censoring conservative voices, “shadow-banning” leading personalities, and impacting American elections in an unprecedented way.In another explosive exposé, Project Veritas Founder James O’Keefe revealed senior Google officials vowing to prevent the “Trump… |
CRUZ ON FIRE: Ted Cruz SLAMS Google Executive for ‘Censoring Conservatives’ Texas Sen. Ted Cruz unloaded on Google Executives at the US Capitol Tuesday; weighing-in on recent reports that the technology giant intentionally censored conservative voices across the United States.“Does Google consider itself a neutral public forum? Are you familiar with a report that was released yesterday that included a whistleblower, videos… |
Recommended Reading: Promoted Content |
PO BOX 7298, Van Nuys, CA 91409-7298 US © 2019 The Sean Hannity Show |
Unsubscribe | Sign Up | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy |
THE FEDERALIST
Your daily update of new content from The Federalist Be lovers of freedom and anxious for the fray June 26, 2019 The Call For Reparations Isn’t About Justice, It’s About Power By John Daniel Davidson Forget about how we’d pay for reparations or who would be eligible. The point isn’t to make things right, but to re-make America. Full article Michael Flynn Attorney Suggests Special Counsel Withheld Key Information From His Defense By Margot Cleveland Michael Flynn’s new attorney Sidney Powell suggested the special counsel may not have produced classified information relevant to Flynn’s case. Powell intends to obtain it. Full article The Puzzling Disconnect Between ‘Euphoria’s’ Wild Teens And Risk-Averse Gen Z By Emily Jashinsky While HBO’s ‘Euphoria’ is definitely shocking, it’s just not representative of today’s teenage experience. Full article 5 Reasons Ravelry Banning Trump Support Is A Much Bigger Deal Than You Might Think By Leslie Price Hundreds of thousands of crafters use Ravelry to find new ideas, new patterns, new projects, new yarns. Allowing political leftism but not conservatism will affect them. Full article Australian Rugby Star Sacked For Posting Christian Meme On Instagram By Sumantra Maitra GoFundMe, where Israel Folau initially located his legal defense fund after being fired over a Christian Instagram meme, abruptly closed his account, accusing him of bigotry. Full article This Chart Explains How Democrats Will Kill Your Current Health Coverage By Christopher Jacobs Many moderate and establishment Democrats view a government-run plan as a more appealing method to reach their single-payer goal. Full article Taking On Student Debt To Pursue A Degree Is A Consensual Choice By Liz Wolfe Bernie Sanders floats a college debt cancellation plan sure to please many, but giving handouts to the wealthy and educated among us is deeply absurd. Full article Hawley’s Big Tech Bill Is An Undeniably Good Thing For Free Speech By Auguste Meyrat It is probably more accurate to frame the issue of regulating social media as more a matter of a free market than one of free speech, although one depends on the other. Full article Cory Booker Says He’s Up For Listening To The Racist Louis Farrakhan By Erielle Davidson Cory Booker’s comments serve as a steady reminder that the Democratic Party does not regard anti-Semitism as a form of ethnic hatred, but a mere difference of opinion. Full article Following House Subpoenas, Robert Mueller To Testify Before Congress By Susanna Hoffman House Democrats have subpoenaed former special counsel Robert Mueller to testify before Congress, despite his claims that is unnecessary. Full article Here’s Your Guide To The First 2020 Democratic Debate Tonight By Tristan Justice Candidates running for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination will face each other on the same stage for the first time tonight. Here are the details. Full article 7 Delusional Fantasies Democratic Presidential Candidates Are Trying To Sell America By Andrew I. Fillat and Henry I. Miller From the ‘Green New Deal’ to ‘Medicare For All,’ slavery reparations to open-borders amnesty, the Democratic presidential contenders are selling Snake Oil, not serious proposals. Full article AOC’s Opposition To Beds For Migrant Kids Is Callous And Cruel By David Marcus To stick it to Donald Trump, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wants kids to sleep without beds. Full article Beto O’Rourke Proposes ‘War Tax’ On Everyone Who Hasn’t Served In The Military By Tristan Justice 2020 Democratic presidential hopeful and former U.S. Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D-TX) proposed a new ‘war tax’ to increase spending on the U.S. military. Full article ‘Election Confessions’ In NBC Poll About 2020 Candidates Are Hilarious By Chrissy Clark NBC released a new way to poll public perspective on the 2020 Democratic candidates. While some responses were thoughtful, others were hilarious and rude. Full article Bernie’s #CancelStudentDebt Is A Dangerous Scam By David Harsanyi Sen. Bernie Sanders’ new plan to eliminate $1.6 trillion in student debt does little to help the poor and absolutely nothing to lower costs. Full article How Tech Bias Became A Kitchen Table Issue By Ben Domenech This is not a conversation limited to activists or media members when families are talking about mom losing her income and her friends. Full article Socialism Didn’t Work In Sweden, And It Won’t Work In America By Susanna Hoffman Bernie Sanders and AOC point to the brief window of Swedish socialism’s artificial success before Sweden crumbled under its reality. Full article Slavery Reparations Not A Priority For Democratic Voters By Tristan Justice Reparations for slavery and members of the LGBT community was not a top priority Democratic voters said they wanted to hear about in this week’s debates. Full article HOW TECH BIAS BECAME A KITCHEN TABLE ISSUE Yesterday, many of the major media figures on the right were talking about another insider whistleblower who was the source of a Project Veritas report on Google’s plans to prevent another “Trump situation” in 2020, including footage of an executive making some troublesome comments. http://vlt.tc/3ohr The executive’s comments defending herself are here. http://vlt.tc/3ohw It was yet another example of the problems these large Silicon Valley entities are facing as we enter into 2020 campaign season in earnest, and deserves attention in the broader context of accusations of partisan bias. But the more important story, believe it or not, was about a knitting website. Read more of The Transom by signing up for a free trial today. follow on Twitter | friend on Facebook | forward to a friend Copyright © 2019 The Federalist, All rights reserved. unsubscribe from this list | update subscription preferences |
REDSTATE
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was
sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the
RedState.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you.
We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer
meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately. Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions You can unsubscribe by clicking here. Or Send postal mail to: RedState Unsubscribe 1735 N. Lynn St – Suite 510, Arlington, VA 22209 * Copyright RedState and its Content Providers. All rights reserved. |