Playbook PM: The Bernie rebellion grows

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Jun 15, 2021 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Rachael Bade, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross

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CAPITOL HILL IS POPPING TODAY. See if you can keep up.

PROGRESSIVES ARE REBELLING — Sen. ED MARKEY (D-Mass.) joined Sen. BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.) in saying he's ready to move on from bipartisan talks. "It's time for us to go our own way," he told reporters about talks with the GOP. "We need to move forward with 50 Democratic votes." But he's not the only one.

Burgess Everett and Sarah Ferris report that defections from the left could torpedo the infrastructure talks: "Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) and ED MARKEY (D-Mass.) gave a press conference Tuesday vowing to oppose any infrastructure accord that lacks major policies to tackle climate change. Rep. PRAMILA JAYAPAL, who leads the Congressional Progressive Caucus, says her members will oppose unless Democrats also commit to a broader, separate bill.

"An even bigger number of left-leaning members are criticizing an emerging bipartisan Senate agreement to spend nearly $1 trillion, $579 billion of it new spending, on physical infrastructure. Senate Banking Committee Chair SHERROD BROWN (D-Ohio), who oversees transit policy on transportation bills, said he looks at anything with GOP support 'with skepticism that MITCH MCCONNELL'S earned.'"

— Across the Capitol, STEVE RICCHETTI told House Dems this morning that they're giving the bipartisan talks between a week and 10 days to figure out if there's a path.

JAN. 6 LATEST — Speaker NANCY PELOSI is meeting with her chairs to iron out next steps now that the bipartisan Jan. 6 commission proposal died in the Senate. This comes as the House Oversight Committee has released new documents showing Capitol Police asking the National Guard for help a dozen or so times that day. Read the documents here

— Rep. ADAM SMITH (D-Wash.) told CNN's Manu Raju this morning that House Dems will try to push the Senate to get to 60 votes on a bipartisan commission. Assuming that fails, they'd then look at creating a select committee to investigate. But Pelosi then said she hasn't made a decision yet.

ON THE REPUBLICAN SIDE OF THINGS …

GOP CONSIDERS BACKING OFF ON OMAR, FOR NOW. Some Republicans want to keep the focus on Democratic infighting instead of moving to try to censure Rep. ILHAN OMAR (D-Minn.).

BUT, BUT, BUT — House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY said on Fox News today that Republicans would unseat her from House Foreign Affairs if they retake the chamber next year: "I will promise you this: If we are fortunate enough to have the majority, Omar would not be serving on Foreign Affairs, or anybody that has an antisemitic, anti-American view."

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BIG POLITICO NEWS — Our esteemed newsroom editor CARRIE BUDOFF BROWN is leaving POLITICO to take a new role overseeing the "Meet the Press" franchise at NBC. As ROBERT ALLBRITTON wrote in his note to the newsroom this morning, "we at POLITICO can count ourselves lucky that we have had this exceptional journalist by our sides for the birth of our publication and critical phases of its growth in the United States and Europe."

A personal note from Rachael: CBB has long been one of the greatest parts of POLITICO. Not just as a boss, but as a friend and mentor. She's been an inspiration to female reporters, a fellow woman with a family and a badass journalist to boot. It's a huge loss for us at POLITICO, but we wish her well!

Good Tuesday afternoon.

DONALD TRUMP has a new spokesperson: RNC alum LIZ HARRINGTON is replacing JASON MILLER.

AS LONG A WAIT AS THE CICADAS! — "U.S. and EU resolve 17-year Boeing-Airbus trade dispute," CNBC: "The United States and European Union said Tuesday they have resolved a 17-year-long fight over aircraft subsidies, agreeing to suspend tariffs for five years stemming from the Boeing-Airbus dispute. …

"As part of the deal, the EU and the U.S. agreed to provide research and development funding through an open and transparent process as well as to not give specific support, such as tax breaks, to their own producers that would harm the other side. The idea is also to collaborate in addressing non-market practices conducted by other countries, including China."

— This is a big breakthrough that President JOE BIDEN can now tout as a tangible deal from his first trip abroad.

UP NEXT IN EUROPE: "Biden and Putin expected to make headway on nuclear talks," by Bryan Bender: "Washington and Moscow have publicly expressed a desire to use the summit to reestablish formal talks on an exigent issue they have traditionally sought to shield from their many disputes. … No one is banking on detailed agreements to emerge from Geneva; even the definition of strategic threats has only grown more complex … But both governments have been striking a similar tone in recent days on the nuclear front, at least rhetorically."

— WaPo's John Hudson has a good look at the Biden administration's internal Russia policy debates, which an official tells him have been "intense" with "strong feelings on different sides" — especially on Nord Stream 2.

 

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DRIP, DRIP, DRIP … The revelations about Trump's political pressure on the Department of Justice during his presidency keep coming. The latest, via NYT's Katie Benner: "Trump Pressed Official to Wield Justice Dept. to Back Election Claims": "Mr. Trump sent an email via his assistant to JEFFREY A. ROSEN, the incoming acting attorney general, that contained documents purporting to show evidence of election fraud in northern Michigan — the same claims that a federal judge had thrown out a week earlier …

"Another email from Mr. Trump to Mr. Rosen followed two weeks later, again via the president's assistant, that included a draft of a brief that Mr. Trump wanted the Justice Department to file to the Supreme Court. … Mr. Rosen made clear to his top deputy in one message that he would have nothing to do with the Italy conspiracy theory, arrange a meeting between the F.B.I. and one of the proponents of the conspiracy, BRAD JOHNSON, or speak about it with RUDOLPH W. GIULIANI. " Some pretty striking emails

SCOTUS WATCH — "Death penalty should be reinstated for Tsarnaev in Boston Marathon bombings case, Biden administration tells U.S. Supreme Court," Boston Globe: "In a 48-page brief, the Department of Justice said the jury's verdict that [ DZHOKHAR] TSARNAEV'S role in the 2013 bombings ― he participated with his brother TAMERLAN TSARNAEV — warranted the death sentence and should be respected and reinstated. … The US Supreme Court is expected to hear oral arguments in the case this fall."

WHAT COULD GO WRONG? — "'Going to be a long winter': Congress hits snooze on funding the government," by Jennifer Scholtes and Caitlin Emma: "The next government shutdown threat is 15 weeks away, and already top lawmakers assume they won't strike a deal in time to prevent another funding punt. Half a dozen senators on the influential Appropriations Committee interviewed by POLITICO seem to have resigned themselves to keeping the government functioning past September using a stopgap funding bill known as a continuing resolution …

"Congress has failed for well over a decade to meet the Oct. 1 deadline for funding the government, resorting each year to temporary patches that spell budgetary turmoil … But seldom have lawmakers been so behind in that work as they are this year. And President Joe Biden shares in the blame for the funding stasis."

THE LAB-LEAK THEORY — "HHS watchdog announces review of NIH grants that likely includes money connected to Wuhan lab," by CNN's Kristen Holmes and Priscilla Alvarez: "Federal government investigators said Tuesday that they are launching a review into how the National Institutes of Health manages and monitors its grant program, which likely includes money connected to a Wuhan lab that GOP lawmakers have been scrutinizing.

"Republicans have zeroed in on NIH's relationship with EcoHealth Alliance, the global nonprofit that helped fund some research at China's Wuhan Institute of Virology, to attack Dr. ANTHONY FAUCI and score political points. … One NIH official, who spoke under the condition of anonymity in order to discuss the review openly, called it 'political' in nature but believed that ultimately it would be a good thing and would clear NIH of any wrongdoing."

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THE THREAT WITHIN — "White House unveils strategy to combat domestic terrorism," by Betsy Woodruff Swan and Myah Ward: "The effort is the culmination of a review, led by the National Security Council, of how the U.S. government has dealt with the growing threat. It reiterates that militia extremists and racially and ethnically motivated violent extremists — predominantly white supremacists — are the most lethal and persistent terrorism threat facing the U.S. …

"But the review did not find a strong connection between domestic terrorism and foreign actors … The strategy document focuses on understanding and sharing information about the threat, preventing the mobilization and recruitment of domestic terrorists, disrupting domestic terrorism plots and combating social problems that contribute to the growth of domestic terrorism."

ANTITRUST THE PROCESS — "Dems are going after Big Tech. It'll affect almost everything you do online," by Leah Nylen: "House Democrats' proposed antitrust overhaul pitches itself as a fight for a fairer internet, less riven by special dealing and conflicts of interest — through provisions aimed surgically at the practices of just a handful of the largest U.S. companies.

"The proposal for the biggest change to U.S. antitrust law in decades would almost exclusively target Google, Facebook, Apple, Amazon and potentially Microsoft … The narrow focus could make the House bill more palatable to Republicans … The results could bring big changes to some of the industry's best-known products, from Amazon Prime and Google's search results to Apple's App Store and Facebook's Messenger and Instagram. LinkedIn and Microsoft Office could even feel the bite."

IT'S THE INTERNET, STUPID — "Poll shows where to find swing voters: Online," by Steven Shepard: "For years, digital strategists in both parties have urged candidates and outside groups to move some of the resources they spend on TV to digital outlets as a way to reach younger voters. But the new poll suggests digital is also necessary to reach older swing voters." The poll

COMING ATTRACTIONS — "White House to host July 4 'independence from virus' bash," by AP's Zeke Miller: "The holiday will see the largest event yet of Biden's presidency: He plans to host first responders, essential workers and military servicemembers and their families on the South Lawn for a cookout and to watch the fireworks over the National Mall. Well more than 1,000 guests are expected, officials said, with final arrangements still to be sorted out.

"The plan shows the dramatic shift in thinking since Biden just three months ago cautiously held out hope that people might be able to hold small cookouts by the Fourth, an idea that seems quaint now given the swift pace of reopening. … [T]he National Mall will host the traditional fireworks ceremony."

 

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MYPILLOW TALK — "Why Mike Lindell Can't Stop," by David Siders in Chaska, Minn., for POLITICO Magazine: "The MyPillow tycoon has lost business pumping up Trump conspiracy theories, and probably lost his chance at a political future. But he believes he's on a divine mission to overturn the election—and he's not alone."

YIKES — "U.S. military guns keep vanishing, some used in street crimes," by AP's Kristin Hall, James LaPorta, Justin Pritchard and Justin Myers: "In the first public accounting of its kind in decades, an Associated Press investigation has found that at least 1,900 U.S. military firearms were lost or stolen during the 2010s, with some resurfacing in violent crimes. Because some armed services have suppressed the release of basic information, AP's total is a certain undercount."

— BEHIND THE BYLINE … @JPritchardAP: "Ten years it took to report this @AP investigation from start to finish. Yes, 10 years. It was so long because 1) armed forces suppressed the release of info and 2) @kmhall is a boss who didn't stop at 'No' or even 'Still no' and definitely not at 'Go away.'"

BOOK CLUB — "New Book Publisher Caters to Conservative Voices It Says Are Being Silenced," by WSJ's Jeffrey Trachtenberg: "Two veteran book-publishing executives have teamed up to launch a conservative publishing house called All Seasons Press LLC … LOUISE BURKE, the former president and publisher of Simon & Schuster's Gallery Books Group, and KATE HARTSON, whom Hachette Book Group dismissed as editorial director of its Center Street imprint earlier this year, said conservative authors are finding it harder to get published in the post-Trump era. …

"All Seasons Press expects to release four books this fall, including works by Mark Meadows, the former Trump administration chief of staff; former White House trade adviser Peter Navarro ; and James Golden, who worked as a producer for years with the late conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh. The publisher said it is targeting 10 new titles in 2022."

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Jessica Nigro will be head of Lucid Motors' global public policy group. She currently is general manager and head of technology and innovation policy at Daimler/Mercedes-Benz.

TRANSITION — The White House announced it will nominate Michael D. Smith as CEO of AmeriCorps. He currently is executive director of the My Brother's Keeper Alliance and director of youth opportunity programs at the Obama Foundation.

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Matt Shapanka, chief counsel for Senate Rules Chair Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), and Megan Shapanka, senior community engagement specialist at the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, welcomed Benjamin "Ben" Shapanka on May 24.

 

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Coronavirus infections up 31% in seven days but zero deaths recorded and hospital admissions continue to fall

EU would 'react firmly' to UK unilateral action, Irish commissioner says
 
 
     
   
     
  Jun 15, 2021  
     
 
Alistair Bushe
 
Alistair Bushe
Editor


Dear reader

The latest plan to tackle Northern Ireland's long waiting lists was unveiled by Health Minister Robin Swann on Tuesday. 

There have been plenty of previous plans to improve our struggling health service, but Mr Swann's five-year strategy is going to cost £700m. 

The Ulster Unionist minister says he wants our long waiting lists to be "banished" by 2026. 

There are currently more than 335,000 waiting on a first consultant-led appointment in Northern Ireland, with some facing waits of up to seven years for treatment.

Undoubtedly the situation has been exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic, but our health service was already in a desperate state before coronavirus arrived. 

In terms of Covid, new infections have shown an increase but hospital admissions for the virus continue to fall.  

 

Alistair Bushe
Editor

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  LIVE UPDATES: Coronavirus NI - Infections up 31% in seven days but zero deaths and hospital admissions continue to fall  
     
  There has been an increase of more than 30 per cent in the number of new Covid-19 infections in the last seven days but hospital admissions continue to fall and zero Covid-19 related deaths were recorded.  
     
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Holidays to Europe and the United States unlikely to return until August, experts warn
 
Holidays to Europe and the United States are not likely to resume until August at the earliest, experts have warned.
 
     
 
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Social distancing likely to stick around all year, says BMA NI chair
 
Mask wearing and social distancing in Northern Ireland is likely to stick around for the rest of the year, the head of a leading medical body believes.
 
     
 
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EU would 'react firmly' to UK unilateral action, Irish commissioner says
 
The EU would "react firmly" if the UK takes further unilateral action over the Northern Ireland Protocol in the coming weeks, the EU financial services commissioner has warned.
 
     
 
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Jamie Bryson warns that anti-NI Protocol protestors may take to streets of Dublin
 
Loyalist activist Jamie Bryon says that protestors against the Northern Ireland Protocol may take their protests to the streets of Dublin.
 
     
 
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Edwin Poots election will leave 'toxic legacy', says Arlene Foster's former adviser
 
A former special adviser to Arlene Foster has warned that the election of the DUP's new leader will leave a "toxic legacy" with voters.
 
     
 
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Van Morrison video sees star question if Arlene Foster should be arrested for singing in public
 
Van Morrison has released a new video in which he questions if the PSNI should investigate Arlene Foster for singing four lines of a Frank Sinatra song at press conference in Co. Fermanagh on Friday.
 
     
 
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NI Troubles pension scheme further delayed until August
 
The long-awaited pension payments for seriously injured Troubles victims has been further delayed. the Victims Payments Board (VPB) has announced.
 
     
     
     
   
     
     
     
   
 
 
   
 
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