Playbook PM: Pence’s tightrope act

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Jul 26, 2022 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eli Okun

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BREAKING — The House Jan. 6 committee is talking with former Secretary of State MIKE POMPEO about testifying behind closed doors, with potential plans for him to speak in the coming days, ABC's Jonathan Karl and Katherine Faulders scooped .

WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 26: Former U.S. Vice President Mike Pence speaks during the Young America's Foundation Student Conference on July 26, 2022 in Washington, DC. Pence outlined a conservative agenda and took questions about Taiwan and his relationship with former President Donald Trump. (Photo by Nathan Howard/Getty Images)

Former VP Mike Pence was the focus in Washington this morning. | Nathan Howard/Getty Images

PARTY LIKE IT'S 2017 — The gang is getting back together, of a sort, as former VP MIKE PENCE and former President DONALD TRUMP return to D.C. for inside-the-Beltway speeches today. The erstwhile running mates are, of course, now potential political rivals and quasi-combatants in a largely one-sided debate over the effort to overturn the 2020 election they lost.

Pence was the focus this morning.

— His speech: In an address at the Young America's Foundation's National Conservative Student Conference, he continued his now-familiar dance of hugging the Trump administration as tightly as possible while distancing himself from Trump's election fraud conspiracy theories.

"I don't know that our movement is that divided," Pence maintained in a Q&A afterward. "I don't know that the president and I differ on issues, but we may differ on focus," he added. "I truly do believe that elections are about the future, and that it's absolutely essential — at a time when so many Americans are hurting, so many families are struggling — that we don't give way to the temptation to look back."

Mostly, Pence sounded like a full-throated conservative, decrying the "pernicious woke agenda," celebrating the end of Roe v. Wade and warning that "American freedom is under attack." More from the N.Y. Post

His book: Pence also announced that his memoir, "So Help Me God," will publish Nov. 15 from Simon & Schuster. Interestingly, that's the same day as former first lady MICHELLE OBAMA's. ( h/t Garrett Graff )

The publisher's description of the book epitomizes Pence's tightrope act: "The most robust defense of the Trump record of anyone who served in the administration, SO HELP ME GOD also chronicles President Trump's severing of their relationship on January 6, 2021 when Pence kept his oath to the Constitution."

Heads up: Trump's speech at the America First Agenda Summit is scheduled for 3 p.m.

CHIPS OFF THE BLOCK — The big $52 billion semiconductor chips and manufacturing legislation advanced on a 64-32 vote this morning in the Senate. Next up is the final vote in the upper chamber, where CHIPS-plus is now expected to pass, before it heads to the House.

One semantic hurdle: Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER said today he now wants the bill to be called "the Chips and Science Bill," per WaPo's Mike DeBonis , the latest of many renamings.

PRESIDENTIAL HEALTH UPDATE — President JOE BIDEN's Covid-19 symptoms are almost entirely gone, as he's finished his course of Paxlovid and started exercising again, presidential doctor KEVIN O'CONNOR said in his latest memo today .

Good Tuesday afternoon.

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BIG MEDIA MOVE — ALYSSA FARAH GRIFFIN will be the new permanent co-host of "The View," filling MEGHAN MCCAIN'S old spot, The Daily Mail's Claudia Aoraha scooped .

JUDICIARY SQUARE

THE SCOTUS STORY — The Supreme Court isn't finished dribbling out details of its internal negotiations to the press. CNN's Joan Biskupic this morning recounts how Chief Justice JOHN ROBERTS tried and failed to stop his fellow conservatives from overturning Roe v. Wade. Justice BRETT KAVANAUGH was the main swing vote Roberts targeted, but Kavanaugh seemingly never came close to changing his mind — and when POLITICO published Justice SAMUEL ALITO's draft opinion, Roberts' task got even harder. Among the details:

  • Though Roberts' efforts to win over Kavanaugh "raised fears among conservatives and hope among liberals," the draft publication led conservative justices to push to release the decision sooner, for fear that it might change. Roberts' drive was "thwarted by the sudden public nature of the state of play," which essentially locked in the majority's votes.
  • "The aggressive leak investigation worsened the existing strains among the justices, their law clerks and other employees in the nine chambers," writes Biskupic.

ANOTHER SCOTUS IMPACT — The conservative majority's ruling in favor of a public high school coach who prayed with students during games has opened the door for more prayer in schools nationwide, WaPo's Hannah Natanson reports . "In response, families, teachers and activists are preparing to push religious worship into public schools nationwide — working to blur the line dividing prayer and pedagogy and promising emotional, spiritual and educational benefits for students. Some school officials are listening."

CONGRESS

THE MARRIAGE BILL — Sen. TAMMY BALDWIN (D-Wis.) said today she's "very hopeful that we'll get there pretty soon" on whipping the requisite 10 Senate GOP votes to support the bill codifying same-sex and interracial marriage rights, per HuffPost's Igor Bobic . Asked if she was surprised that fellow Wisconsinite RON JOHNSON had gotten on board, she said, "I take each of my Senate colleagues one at a time."

— Sen. RICHARD BURR (R-N.C.) has shifted slightly from a no vote on the bill to "leaning in opposition," per NBC's Sahil Kapur . Sens. PAT TOOMEY (R-Pa.) and MIKE BRAUN (R-Ind.) said they won't reveal their votes ahead of time, per Bobic . Sen. SHELLEY MOORE CAPITO (R-W.Va.) is "still looking at it," per Kapur .

RECONCILABLE DIFFERENCES — Sen. RON WYDEN (D-Ore.) said today that he wants the reconciliation bill to include stepped-up IRS tax audits to help fund Obamacare subsidies, per Bloomberg's Erik Wasson .

A TAXING REALITY — WSJ's Richard Rubin has a brutal story this morning on just how feckless Democrats have been on tax policy over the past year and a half, thanks to their narrow congressional margins. Republicans' big 2017 tax reform looks here to stay, at least until parts of it expire at the end of 2025.

The gist: "Almost none of the major tax ideas Democrats proposed as they won control of the federal government 18 months ago will get over the finish line."

 

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ALL POLITICS

2024 WATCH — New Hampshire Democrats are souring on Biden, who doesn't even come in first in a new poll of a hypothetical contested primary in 2024. The University of New Hampshire survey finds Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG nudging out Biden as respondents' top pick, 17% to 16%, followed by Sen. ELIZABETH WARREN (D-Mass.) and California Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM tied at 10%.

— The prospect of a looming showdown between Trump and Florida Gov. RON DESANTIS is roiling top Florida Republicans, "many of whom are torn over having to pick sides and would rather not see a clash arrive, though they expect one," WSJ's Alex Leary reports from Hollywood, Fla. "Some hope Mr. Trump, 76, won't run and some want Mr. DeSantis, 43, to wait his turn. Others fantasize about a Trump-DeSantis ticket." One person close to Trump tells the WSJ the former president isn't worried about most 2024 contenders: "Only Ron matters."

UP FOR DEBATE — Public debates between Democratic Sen. RAPHAEL WARNOCK and GOP challenger HERSCHEL WALKER are becoming a point of contention in the Georgia race, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution's Greg Bluestein reports . Walker vowed to debate Warnock, but he has yet to accept official invitations to the scheduled showdowns, "and some GOP political observers don't think he will. Instead, he has made a sport of moving the goalposts for the events, drawing attention away from other issues that have dogged his Senate bid." Now, Warnock is hitting Walker on the matter, releasing a new TV ad today titled "Scared."

RYAN ON THE HILL — Rep. TIM RYAN (D-Ohio) is pitching himself to voters in the Senate race as a pro-worker candidate — a stance underscored by his advocacy for Capitol Hill staffers, including the creation of the House Center for Well-Being, Katherine Tully-McManus reports . But "Ryan's longtime quest to improve a workplace many voters brand 'the swamp' might prove too inside-baseball for constituents who would rather hear how he's combating inflation and protecting their own jobs."

JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH

THE INVESTIGATIONS — Two fake Trump electors in Georgia in 2020 are now under investigation by the State Bar of Georgia, per The Atlanta Journal-Constitution's David Wickert . The probe comes after the 65 Project filed complaints against them, part of the watchdog's effort to punish lawyers across the country who tried to overturn the election.

POLICY CORNER

THE NEW DRUG WAR — The Biden administration may be on the brink of supporting supervised drug consumption sites, which would mark "a radical shift in U.S. drug control policy" if the Justice Department signs off, NYT's Noah Weiland reports from Manchester, N.H. Already, drug czar RAHUL GUPTA has shifted toward a progressive "harm reduction" approach, which seeks to tackle the opioid crisis and other drug addiction by lowering risks instead of going abstinence-only. "As fentanyl continues to pummel communities, Dr. Gupta says that the Biden administration has adopted a consider-everything attitude."

ON THE ADA ANNIVERSARY — The Biden administration today announced $343 million in funding from the bipartisan infrastructure law to improve accessibility for disabled people in train stations, per ABC's Amanda Maile . The money "will be allotted to transit agencies across the country to retrofit rail and subway stations for wheelchair use."

 

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AMERICA AND THE WORLD

DANCE OF THE SUPERPOWERS — In a new report, Sen. ROB PORTMAN (R-Ohio) charges that China has been targeting the Fed for years, trying to infiltrate and recruit people from the central bank, per the Cleveland Plain Dealer's Andrew Tobias .

FOR YOUR RADAR — "'She's a Human Being Who Was Killed in Cold Blood': Shireen Abu Akleh's Family Demands U.S. Action," by Joseph Gedeon: "In an exclusive statement and interview, they argue the White House has not taken their concerns seriously and has been reluctant to meet with them. … After this interview took place, the Abu Akleh family says they were granted a Tuesday afternoon meeting with [Secretary of State ANTONY] BLINKEN."

THE ECONOMY

RECESSION WATCH — "Gloomy and More Uncertain" is how the IMF headlines its latest worldwide economic outlook report, which drops its prediction for global growth this year down to 3.2%. "The outlook has darkened significantly since April," writes Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas . "The world may soon be teetering on the edge of a global recession, only two years after the last one."

THE NEW NORMAL — Experts warn that the high gas prices afflicting the Biden White House — and Biden's America — are likely to rear their heads quite a bit under future administrations, too, Ben Lefebvre reports . "The reason: The United States' capacity for refining oil into gasoline is declining, a trend that appears irreversible — for reasons that include climate change. But the nation's appetite for fuel is holding firm."

TRUMP CARDS

SPORTS BLINK — Trump isn't backing down from hosting the Saudi-backed LIV Golf event in Bedminster this week, despite protests from 9/11 victims' families. "I don't know much about the 9/11 families, I don't know what is the relationship to this, and their very strong feelings, and I can understand their feelings," he tells WSJ's Andrew Beaton . "I can't really comment on that because I don't know exactly what they're saying, and what they're saying who did what." As for the controversy around the murder of JAMAL KHASHOGGI, "that has died down so much," he adds.

Meanwhile, a vivid new ad from the families blasts the golfers and Bedminster (though not Trump by name): "How much money to turn your back on your own country?" Watch, via NYT's Maggie Haberman

WE'LL ALWAYS HAVE HELSINKI — Axios' Mike Allen has this wild nugget from Jonathan Lemire's new book , "The Big Lie," about Trump's 2018 press conference in Finland with Russian President VLADIMIR PUTIN: " FIONA HILL, the senior Russia expert on the National Security Council, who was sitting one row in front of me, later told me that she considered doing something, anything — including faking a heart attack — to disrupt the proceedings and get Trump to stop talking."

 

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WAR IN UKRAINE

AD ASTRA — Russia's new space chief, YURI BORISOV , announced today the country would drop out of the International Space Station project after 2024 to focus on building its own orbital space station, per the AP . Russia's withdrawal marks the end of one of the last areas of cooperation between Moscow and the U.S.

KNOWING OLENA ZELENSKA — The Ukrainian first lady is on the digital cover of Vogue, with a profile by Rachel Donadio and photos by Annie Leibovitz.

PLAYBOOKERS

OUT AND ABOUT — Values Partnerships hosted a private screening at the Navy Memorial Burke Theater of the new film "Till," telling the story of Mamie Till-Mobley's pursuit of justice for her son Emmett Till. SPOTTED: director Chinonye Chukwu, producer Keith Beauchamp, Adriene Bowles, Roslyn Brock, Phyllis Dickerson, Deborah Watts, Barbara Broccoli, Kamau Marshall, Joshua and Michelle DuBois, Charmion Kinder and April Ryan.

— SPOTTED at the retirement party for Toni Bush, outgoing head of government affairs for News Corp, on the roof at the Hay-Adams: Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.), Rep. Doris Matsui (D-Calif.), Andrea Mitchell, Donna Brazile, Steve Elmendorf, Danny O'Brien, Susan Fox, Melinda Lewis, Todd Thorpe, DeDe Lea, Fred Humphries, Tammy Haddad and Frank Raines.

WHITE HOUSE DEPARTURE LOUNGE — Michael LaRosa will be a managing director at Hamilton Place Strategies, CNN's Kate Bennett scooped . He most recently has been press secretary for first lady Jill Biden and special assistant to the president.

TRANSITIONS — Former national security adviser Robert O'Brien is now a distinguished senior fellow at the Pepperdine School of Public Policy. The announcement Blair Kiser is now senior director of government relations at Social Current. They most recently were director of government relations and advocacy at NephCure Kidney International. … Sarah Harris is joining Stand Up America as deputy comms director. She previously was at Everytown for Gun Safety.

Correction: Monday's Playbook PM misstated the level of support in a new poll for federal legislation protecting abortion access. Fifty-seven percent of voters support such a proposal.

 

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California Today: Last call at 4 a.m.?

A proposal in the State Legislature would allow San Francisco, Fresno and Oakland to keep bars open for two extra hours.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Tuesday. California lawmakers weigh a proposal to allow bars to stay open for two more hours. Plus, San Diego residents are moving to Tijuana to get more for their money.

The bar area of Tosca Cafe in San Francisco.Peter DaSilva for The New York Times

Anyone who has spent a late night at a bar has heard the echoes of "last call," the signal that the final drinks of the night are being served and that soon it will be time to head home.

In California, the warning typically comes just before 2 a.m., after which it is illegal to sell alcohol anywhere in the state. Now a proposal in the State Legislature wants to change that.

Senate Bill 930 would allow seven cities in California to serve alcohol until 4 a.m. as part of a five-year pilot program beginning in 2025. The places included are San Francisco, Fresno, Oakland, Cathedral City, Palm Springs, Coachella and West Hollywood.

Nationwide, the most common last call is at 2 a.m., but bars in New York City can serve until 4 a.m. and some in Chicago till 5 a.m. State Senator Scott Wiener, who wrote California's proposal, said extending the hours that businesses can offer alcohol would provide them an economic boost after an especially tough few years.

"Coming out of the pandemic, our nightlife venues are really hurting," Wiener told me. "For some of these small businesses, this could be the difference between being viable and not being viable."

The bill is scheduled for a hearing next week before the State Assembly Committee on Appropriations. To become law, it would need majority approval from both the Senate and Assembly as well as a signature from Gov. Gavin Newsom.

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Though similar bills in the state have failed in the past, Newsom, who owns a winery and hospitality company, is expected to be more sympathetic than his predecessor. In 2018, Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed an earlier version of Wiener's bill, which would have included Los Angeles and Sacramento, and cited a potential increase in drunken driving.

"California's laws regulating late-night drinking have been on the books since 1913," Brown said in his veto statement. "I believe we have enough mischief from midnight to 2 without adding two more hours of mayhem."

Increasing the window for alcohol sales by two or more hours is associated with a rise in alcohol-related harms, such as driving after drinking and alcohol-linked assaults and injuries, according to an analysis in the Guide to Community Preventive Services from the C.D.C.

The findings are more than a decade old, but the connection between later trading hours and alcohol-related problems is still "as close to black and white as we can get," said Paul Gruenewald, a senior research scientist at the nonprofit Prevention Research Center of Berkeley, which is sponsored by the government-run National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

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Allowing bars to stay open later means that more people will be coming to bars to drink each night, or the same people will drink for longer, Gruenewald said. Either way, that results in more alcohol being consumed.

"It's not at all surprising: more alcohol, more problems," Gruenewald told me. "It's got to be one of the most bone-headed things I can imagine."

In West Hollywood, city officials have already voted to take advantage of the delayed last-call times if the state approves the measure. "Many of us have explored and exhausted our options for innovative ways to continue paying our employees and keep doors open," David Cooley, owner of the Abbey, one of the city's most popular bars, told The Los Angeles Times.

Wiener pointed out that under his proposal, cities could decide how to put the extended alcohol sale hours into effect. Keeping bars open until 4 a.m. could be allowed only on a certain street, or on just one day of the week, he said.

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"It's absurd that California has this one-size-fits-all closing time at 2 a.m., whether you're in downtown San Francisco or a small farm town," he told me. "We should give cities flexibility to decide what closing time works for them. That's all this does. It doesn't force any city to do anything."

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Men line up to receive monkeypox vaccinations.Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

The rest of the news

  • Monkeypox: A toddler in California is one of two children who tested positive for monkeypox in the United States, CBS News reports.
  • Rage rooms: Some California environmental officials are worried that those who operate "rage rooms" could be releasing hazardous waste into the environment, CalMatters reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • South of the border: The cost of living in San Diego is expensive, so residents are moving to Tijuana, Mexico, to save money with the hope of buying a home.
  • Waterfall: A man died and a woman was injured when the pair fell down a waterfall in the San Bernardino Mountains, The Associated Press reports.
  • Sixth Street: The Sixth Street bridge in Los Angeles was closed for the third consecutive night because of "questionable activity," The Los Angeles Times reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Great white sharks: There is growing concern for surfers as the population of sharks in Monterey Bay is drastically increasing, CBS News reports.
  • Oak fire: A wildfire near Yosemite National Park grew throughout the weekend across nearly 17,000 acres, but Cal Fire expects to contain it by Saturday.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Wrongful conviction: A man who spent 20 years in prison on a wrongful murder conviction says the City of San Francisco withheld a key piece of evidence to make him seem guilty, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
Susan Pickering

What you get

For $1.5 million: A Spanish-style home in Altadena, a Craftsman bungalow in San Francisco and a midcentury ranch house in Santa Barbara.

David Malosh for The New York Times

What we're eating

Hot days call for cold noodles.

View of the Richmond bridge from Point Molate.Heidi Schumann for The New York Times

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Anita Baron, who recommends the city of Richmond in the Bay Area:

"I love climbing the hills in Wildcat Canyon, the artifacts and history presented in the Rosie the Riveter Museum, the fascinating World War II shipyards, the coastal trails and paths for hiking and biking, the various parks and wonderful shoreline access, the road that takes us out to Point Molate, the waterside community at Point Richmond, the Point Isabel dog park with running, frolicking dog trails along the bluffs … I go back to Richmond more and more. I like it."

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We'll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

A front yard with drought-tolerant plants in Manhattan Beach.Monica Almeida for The New York Times

Before you go, some good news

Even in the scorching summer heat of Altadena, Seriina Covarrubias's front yard feels cool and inviting. Two years ago, she tore out her lawn and replaced it with mostly drought-tolerant plants native to Southern California.

Birds now flock to her garden. So do lizards, ladybugs, praying mantises, bees and caterpillars. "I thought it was going to take longer for a natural habitat to materialize," Covarrubias told The Los Angeles Times.

Covarrubias said that working in the garden helped her process the loss of her father, her "best friend," who had been living with her before his death in June 2020.

"It gave me something to take care of that wasn't myself so I could focus on that when I was too far into grief," she said.

Her father had always wanted her to put money into her house. Now, she honors his memory by planting sweet-scented roses that he cherished.

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya

Correction: Yesterday's newsletter misstated the location of the Oak fire. It was near Yosemite National Park, not within it.

P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Change, as the Constitution (5 letters).

Jack Kramer and Briana Scalia contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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