HAPPY TUESDAY. We have some personal news. (Is that how this goes?) AFTER FOUR YEARS at the helm of Playbook, and 11 years for JAKE and nine for ANNA at POLITICO, we've decided it's time for a new adventure. We'll pass the baton and leave POLITICO at the end of this year. WHEN WE TOOK OVER in July 2016, we knew we were taking over a unique platform -- but we didn't quite understand how special it was. Playbookers hail from all over the planet, come from all walks of life and have been waking up every morning, rain or shine, holiday, weekday or weekend, to the POLITICO Playbook for 13 years. WE'RE REALLY PROUD of what we've all been able to do here: Playbook readership has tripled since 2016, we created a popular audio briefing and afternoon edition, hosted events across the country and in D.C. with governors, the vice president, senators, members of the House and nearly every congressional leader. Tax reform. Impeachment. The midterms. USMCA, which was, as you've heard, the president's top legislative priority. The wall. The shutdown. Infrastructure weeks (plural). Two presidential elections. And Covid. WE'RE VERY GRATEFUL that you have come along for the ride. And what a wild ride it's been -- more than 1,500 Playbooks, dozens of events and a best-selling book. POLITICO is a massive newsroom filled with loads of talented journalists -- a crew we've been very proud to have been a part of. But, as a smart man once said, this has all been wonderful, now I'm on my way. Thanks to Robert Allbritton, Carrie Budoff Brown, John Harris, Matt Kaminski and Patrick Steel. Most of all, our gut check and terrific editor Blake Hounshell, John Bresnahan and the Hill team and our intrepid Playbookers Eli Okun and Garrett Ross. WHAT'S NEXT? Playbook has grown significantly over the last four years, and we have no doubt that will continue. As for us -- Anna and Jake -- we're excited to take on a new challenge and we'll have more to say about our next steps soon enough. But first, we have an election to cover, a post-election to report on, a lame duck to help navigate and leadership elections to get in the middle of. Buckle up, it's going to be a hell of a ride. Read the note to staff from Matt and Carrie here AND NOW back to our regular programming. … 28 DAYS until Election Day -- four weeks from today. NEW: SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI told House Democratic leaders on a conference call Monday evening that her negotiations with Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN were going "very slowly," according to sources on the call. MNUCHIN and PELOSI are scheduled to speak again today. HAPPENING THIS MORNING: JAKE and ANNA will interview House Democratic Whip JIM CLYBURN (D-S.C.) and former A.G. ERIC HOLDER at 9 A.M. in the latest Playbook Interview. Watch MARKET WATCH … WSJ: "U.S. Stocks Close Higher on Signs of Muted Political Risk," by Anna Isaac and Logan Moore FIRST IN PLAYBOOK … THE LINCOLN PROJECT is launching a $1 million digital ad campaign in Texas focusing on Trump's "encouragement of violence, extremism, and white supremacist organizations as well as the malice he has shown in both his initial response" to the coronavirus and "his blatant disregard for others when he knowingly exposed countless people to the virus after he knew he was infected." Some ads will be released in Spanish and they will run for a week, with the potential to continue through November. The three ads -- NEW … DETROIT NEWS/LOCAL 4 POLL OF MICHIGAN: BIDEN 48, TRUMP 39. (h/t Chad Livengood) GOP DIGS IN … WAPO'S BOB COSTA: "Republican recalcitrance about the virus persists even as GOP faces growing turmoil": "Widespread Republican recalcitrance about federal health guidelines showed few signs of waning on Monday, even as the party faces growing turmoil following President Trump's hospitalization and as more White House aides test positive for the novel coronavirus. "White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany and at least two of her deputies have now contracted the virus, further derailing the functioning of a West Wing plunged into crisis and adding to a long list of top Republicans who have been infected. But many Republicans continue to dismiss calls for alarm — and for changes to the party's message on the virus and its operations. "Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), who tested positive last week, said in an interview with a conservative talk-show host that there is 'a level of unjustifiable hysteria' about a virus that has killed nearly 210,000 Americans and asked, 'Why do we think we actually can stop the progression of a contagious disease?'" WaPo -- "A U.S. senator kept taking off his mask on a Delta flight, raising questions about safety oversight," by WaPo's Michael Laris and Lori Aratani: "The chairman of the Senate committee that oversees airlines and U.S. transportation policy had his mask off for extended periods on a Delta flight to Mississippi on Thursday night, according to another passenger, and the company said he had to be reminded twice by a flight attendant to follow the airline's mask requirement. "The next day, the Trump administration rejected a union petition calling for a federal mandate requiring masks be worn on planes, trains and buses, saying the Department of Transportation 'embraces the notion that there should be no more regulations than necessary.'" UP NEXT … THE VP DEBATE … CHRIS CADELAGO: "Harris preps to take on Pence": "Harris' tone toward the laid-up president is expected to mirror Biden's of late, according to aides and allies. The Democratic presidential contender and Harris have wished the president a speedy recovery. Their campaign pulled negative TV ads and implored staff to refrain from piling on to reporters and on social media, though as Trump emerged from the hospital late Monday, Biden suggested he would not let him off the hook for not wearing a mask and flaunting social distancing protocols. "The grim circumstances don't change Harris' overarching objective: to methodically yolk Pence to the Trump administration's months of failures to contain the virus, zeroing in on his role as chair of the White House Coronavirus Task Force. The legal threat to the Affordable Care Act — clarified by the battle over the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's seat — will be another focal point for Harris. And after Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito lamented Monday the 'ruinous consequences for religious liberty' of the court's decision that granted marriage rights — and signaled that the ruling should be reconsidered — the VP contenders' sharply divergent records on same-sex marriage are likely to surface. "Harris' aides view Pence as a far more polished and disciplined orator than the president. Unlike with Trump, they say, when Pence says something untrue it is packaged in language that makes it harder to spot and counter in real time. But Harris will attempt to pin him down on Trump's stewardship of the sputtering economy and explosive remarks on race and groups tied to white supremacy." CNN'S MANU RAJU on the trail with LINDSEY GRAHAM in South Carolina, with ALEX ROGERS and ALI ZASLAV: "Graham, vulnerable in South Carolina, tells liberals: 'We're gonna kick your ass'" … The piece that aired on CNN THE FIGHT FOR FLORIDA … -- AP'S WILL WEISSERT and BILL BARROW in Miami: "The Democratic presidential nominee made his second trip to Florida in a little over two weeks on Monday. His visit to Miami was designed to encroach on some of Trump's turf, even swinging through Little Havana, a typically conservative area known for its staunch opposition to the communist government that Fidel Castro installed in Cuba." -- SABRINA RODRÍGUEZ and MARC CAPUTO in Miami: "Biden mounts late fight for Miami": "After months of dire warnings that Donald Trump is making gains in this liberal bastion, Joe Biden is finally listening to South Florida Democrats. For much of the campaign, Miami Democrats have been sounding the alarm at Biden's relatively tepid support among Democratic-leaning, non-Cuban Hispanic voters here and throughout Florida. The problem was compounded by Trump's outsized support among Cuban Americans. "Without a big winning margin and high turnout in populous Miami-Dade County, Biden would have little chance of winning the state. So over the past two months, Biden's campaign responded by embarking on a hiring spree in South Florida, giving more local-press interviews and, in combination with outside groups, pouring $23 million into TV commercials in the Miami media market, according to data from the tracking firm Advertising Analytics. "Ad Analytics data show that Biden's campaign significantly outspent Trump in Spanish-language television ads in Florida over the last five weeks — spending a total of $3.1 million to Trump's $2 million — and is blanketing African American newspapers and Jamaican and Haitian radio stations with ads." POLITICO -- "Florida voter registration system crashes on last day for filing," by Gary Fineout |
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