Playbook PM: Pelosi lands in Taiwan

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Aug 02, 2022 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eugene Daniels and Eli Okun

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In this photo released by the Taiwan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, right is greeted by Taiwan's Foreign Minister Joseph Wu as she arrives in Taipei, Taiwan, Tuesday, Aug. 2, 2022. Pelosi arrived in Taiwan on Tuesday night despite threats from Beijing of serious consequences, becoming the highest-ranking American official to visit the self-ruled island claimed by China in 25 years. ( Taiwan Ministry of Foreign Affairs via AP)

Speaker Nancy Pelosi said her Taiwan trip "is more important today than ever, as the world faces a choice between autocracy and democracy." | Taiwan Ministry of Foreign Affairs via AP Photo

Speaker NANCY PELOSI has arrived in Taiwan, becoming the highest-ranking American official to visit the country in more than two decades while defying warnings from both U.S. national security officials and the Chinese government about possible escalations between the two nations.

After being pretty mum about the trip for security reasons for weeks, Pelosi sent out a statement after landing, saying the trip "in no way contradicts" the U.S.' long-standing recognition of the "One China" policy, but that "America's solidarity with the 23 million people of Taiwan is more important today than ever, as the world faces a choice between autocracy and democracy."

Pelosi expanded on that statement in a full-blown WaPo op-ed , framing her trip as the natural extension of the Taiwan Relations Act, which was signed 43 years ago by then-President JIMMY CARTER and "set out America's commitment to a democratic Taiwan."

"Today, America must remember that vow," Pelosi wrote. Noting China's "intensified tensions" and "accelerated aggression" with Taiwan, she said that the U.S. "must stand by Taiwan, which is an island of resilience."

The reaction …

— From Congressional Republicans: Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL and 25 other Republican senators released a joint statement of support for Pelosi's trip: "For decades, members of the United States Congress, including previous Speakers of the House, have traveled to Taiwan. This travel is consistent with the United States' One China policy, to which we are committed."

— From Taiwan: The nation's tallest skyscraper was lit up with a welcome message for the speaker (h/t William Gallo), and Pelosi was greeted by Taiwan's foreign minister, JOSEPH WU.

— From China: In a statement, the country's foreign ministry said the nation "severely condemned" Pelosi's trip. "We are closely following the itinerary of Speaker Pelosi," said spox HUA CHUNYING . "And if the U.S. continues down the wrong path, we will take strong and resolute measures to protect our sovereignty and security interests."

Reporting from Taipei, WaPo's Lily Kuo writes that "Chinese maritime authorities, meanwhile, announced additional military exercises in the South China Sea and live-fire drills in the Bohai Sea, near the Korean Peninsula, this week. Reuters, citing an unnamed source, reported that Chinese fighter jets on Tuesday flew close to the median line of the Taiwan Strait, the unofficial military boundary. … Other likely retaliatory measures include more frequent and larger-scale military exercises closer to Taiwan, as well as ramping up gray-zone tactics — coercive actions that stop short of outright conflict. China banned food shipments on Monday from more than 100 Taiwanese exporters."

Good Tuesday afternoon.

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POLICY CORNER

IMMIGRATION FILES — Four hundred children separated from their parents under the Trump administration have now been reunited by Biden officials, NBC's Julia Ainsley and Jacob Soboroff report . As many of the parents were deported, the administration is giving them the opportunity to come to the U.S. and live/work legally here for three years, along with mental health services, paid travel and more. "Lawyers for the families have advocated for legal permanent status on behalf of separated families, but so far the Biden administration has not agreed to that provision." Advocates guess that more than 1,000 families still have not been made whole.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE IS TOUTING — The share of Americans without health insurance hit a record-low 8% in the first quarter of the year, per a new HHS analysis, USA Today's Maureen Groppe scooped . That includes more than 5 million people who have gotten insurance since 2020. But keeping the rate that low could depend in part on whether Democrats can extend expanded Obamacare subsidies via the reconciliation bill.

ALL POLITICS

AD WARS — The NRSC is officially jumping into Colorado and Washington state with new ads as Republicans' seek to expand their map of Senate possibilities, Natalie Allison reports . The ads, which total more than $1 million, link Sens. MICHAEL BENNET (D-Colo.) and PATTY MURRAY (D-Wash.) to President JOE BIDEN — literally morphing their faces together — and hit the Democrats on inflation.

— Overall ad spending in the midterms totals almost $3.6 billion so far, on track to become the most expensive midterm cycle ever, Axios' Sara Fischer reports . Streaming has rapidly emerged as a major new target for ad dollars.

PRIMARY COLORS — Nobody's having more fun with a campaign they're probably about to lose than Rep. BILLY LONG (R-Mo.), who took advantage of DONALD TRUMP's winking double-Eric endorsement in the Missouri GOP Senate primary to wedge himself in with some ballot-placement humor: "I coined the phrase 'Trump Train.' I've been with him through thick and thin but I was taken aback when he came out with a full throated endorsement of me in #MOSen race! He said to pick BETWEEN the two ERIC's — that's ME! [ERIC SCHMITT] line 2 [ERIC GREITENS] line 4 I'm BETWEEN the two on line 3!"

— Sen. ROY BLUNT (R-Mo.), via Jordain Carney : "One way to win the horse race is to bet on all the horses."

— Though Rep. HALEY STEVENS is in the lead, Rep. ANDY LEVIN has narrowed the gap in their Michigan Democratic primary, the Washington Examiner's Katherine Doyle reports . Black voters in Oakland County are expected to be a pivotal deciding bloc in the race.

CASH DASH — California Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM has amassed an enormous fundraising advantage over his Republican rival — $24 million on hand vs. $300,000 — thanks in part to big donors from Silicon Valley and Hollywood, reports the S.F. Chronicle's Sophia Bollag .

DEMOCRACY DIGEST — A former Wisconsin state Supreme Court justice said baselessly this spring that the state should consider throwing out Biden's 2020 victory — but privately, he called decertification "a practical impossibility," WaPo's Patrick Marley reveals from Madison. MICHAEL GABLEMAN wrote the memo to state Assembly Speaker ROBIN VOS even as publicly his report "electrified election skeptics."

ENDORSEMENT WATCH — Biden and VP KAMALA HARRIS today backed Rep. KAREN BASS (D-Calif.) for L.A. mayor.

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president's ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today .

 
 

CONGRESS

RECONCILABLE DIFFERENCES — Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) told Hoppy Kercheval that he intends to talk with Sen. KYRSTEN SINEMA (D-Ariz.) about the reconciliation bill this afternoon. "This is everything Kyrsten agreed to in December," he said, though as Burgess Everett notes , that's not really true of tightening the carried interest loophole (which she opposes).

MANCHIN GETS BACKUP — More than 125 top economists argue that the Inflation Reduction Act would, in fact, reduce inflation in a new letter today, CNN's Betsy Klein scooped . The list of supporters includes big names like ROBERT RUBIN, JACK LEW, BETSEY STEVENSON, MARK ZANDI, DOUG ELMENDORF and JOSEPH STIGLITZ. The letter

— Other new analyses project that the legislation "would not cement a giant tax increase or result in profligate federal spending," as Republicans have warned, NYT's Jim Tankersley reports .

— And in a new NYT op-ed , STEVEN RATTNER calls the bill "one of the best packages that I can remember Congress giving birth to."

FOLLOWING THE MONEY — United for Clean Power has been funding digital ads in progressive Democrats' districts that call on "Squad" members "to demand environmental justice provisions or kill the Reconciliation bill altogether," report FWIW's Nick Seymour and Kyle Tharp . They dug into who's behind the opaque 501(c)(4) and found that on 2018 and 2019 tax forms, "the organization's only major expenditure was to pay Republican firm Majority Strategies $135,000 for 'advertising.'"

IT'S THE PITS — Senators haven't yet struck a deal on amendment votes for the legislation to help veterans exposed to toxic burn pits, per CNN's Manu Raju . But Sen. JON TESTER (D-Mont.) said he expects the bill will come up for a vote today.

GUNS IN AMERICA — Smith & Wesson is facing a subpoena from the House Oversight Committee for information about its AR-15-style rifles, WaPo's Jackie Alemany reports . "The letter transmitting notice of the subpoena to Smith … highlighted the incomplete figures provided to the Oversight Committee by Smith & Wesson so far — and key gaps in the company's metrics."

RULES AND REGULATIONS — Both Sens. ROB PORTMAN (R-Ohio) and CHRIS MURPHY (D-Conn.) said they support some Senate rule changes to encourage bipartisanship going forward, Gabe Fleisher writes for Wake Up To Politics . Following a debate hosted by the Bipartisan Policy Center on Monday night, Portman said adopting the House's suspension of the rules would "'allow more freedom' for the Senate at large, 'but it's going to require us taking back some of those rights that every individual senator' has to gum things up," while "Murphy agreed that fixes were needed to stop senators from abusing the 'enormous negative power' that they each possess to slow the chamber down."

THE WHITE HOUSE

PRESIDENTIAL HEALTH UPDATE — Biden is still testing positive with his rebound coronavirus case and mostly feeling well, though a slight "loose cough" has returned, presidential doctor KEVIN O'CONNOR said in his latest memo today .

CLICKER — The White House put out a photo of a July 1 meeting where Biden discussed the plan to kill AYMAN AL-ZAWAHRI with his national security team — including a model of the house where he was staying.

FIRST LADY FILES — In a new Q&A with Real Simple's Lauren Iannotti , first lady JILL BIDEN talks about keeping her teaching job while in the White House, "the art of the catnap," top sheets, why motherhood never gets easier and more. "Sometimes it feels like we're pushing this boulder up the hill, but progress is being made," Biden says. "Joe's been in office for, what, 18 months now? And everybody has access to vaccines. We got the schools reopened — thank God we all got off Zoom — we got health care, we got money for broadband so underserved kids can have internet. I don't want to sound like a political ad, but we have done so much."

 

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THE ECONOMY

THE EMPLOYMENT PICTURE — Job openings dropped to 10.7 million in June, their lowest level in nine months and a bigger fall than economists had predicted, per new Labor Department data released today. That indicates that the labor market might be finally starting to cool a bit. But the "great resignation" continues apace as the number of workers quitting jobs ticked down only slightly, to 4.2 million. More from MarketWatch The BLS data

AILING AMERICA — "How the housing crunch turned young voters off on the economy," by Katy O'Donnell: "The combination of record-high home prices and escalating mortgage costs — rates have nearly doubled in the last seven months — threatens to price a generation of would-be buyers out of the market, cratering home sales. Fueling the problem are rapidly rising rents."

MEDIAWATCH

THE END OF THE TRUMP BOOM — CNN's profits are expected to drop below $1 billion this year for the first time since 2016, NYT's Benjamin Mullin scooped . The decline follows a ratings dip and the implosion this year of the CNN+ streaming service. "However the numbers are crunched, inside CNN the hunt is on for new revenue. To help solve the financial puzzle, [CHRIS] LICHT has tapped CHRIS MARLIN , a longtime friend who was recently an executive at the Florida homebuilder Lennar."

PLAYBOOKERS

IN MEMORIAM — "Joseph Mondello, former U.S. Ambassador and Nassau GOP leader, dies at 84," by Newsday's Candice Ferrette: "He served as U.S. Ambassador to Trinidad and Tobago under former President Donald Trump."

STAFFING UP — Nadine Nally is now cyber adviser to the director of net assessment at the Defense Department. She most recently was director for defense innovation and cyber policy at the NSC.

MEDIA MOVES — Cristóbal Alex has joined MSNBC as a political analyst. He previously was White House deputy Cabinet secretary. His debut Declan Harty is now a financial services reporter covering U.S. capital market regulation for POLITICO. He most recently covered finance and crypto for Fortune. Sam Sutton is moving over to become a co-author of Morning Money.

TRANSITIONS — Judd Deere is now comms director for Sarah Huckabee Sanders' Arkansas gubernatorial campaign. He most recently was deputy chief of staff for comms for Sen. Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), and is a Trump White House alum. … Ami Shah is now chief immigration counsel for the Senate Judiciary Committee. She previously was counsel on the House Judiciary Immigration and Citizenship Subcommittee.

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California Today: A conversation with California’s chief justice

Tani Cantil-Sakauye, who has led the state's highest court since 2011, will step down next year.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Tuesday. Tani Cantil-Sakauye, who has led the state's highest court since 2011, will step down next year. Plus, at least two died in Siskiyou County wildfire.

Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye announced last week that she would step down in January after 12 years.Rich Pedroncelli/Associated Press

A major change is coming to California's third branch of government.

Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye announced last week that she would step down in January after 12 years at the helm of the state's Supreme Court. Cantil-Sakauye, a moderate, guided the court through severe budget cuts following the Great Recession and is known for fostering a culture of collaboration on the bench.

The daughter of farmworkers, Cantil-Sakauye grew up in Sacramento and then attended U.C. Davis and its law school. After she spent two decades as a judge, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger appointed her to the high court, where she began serving in 2011. She became the first person of color, and the second woman, to serve as chief justice.

During her time on the court, Cantil-Sakauye championed the end of cash bail and criticized the Trump administration for allowing federal immigration authorities to make arrests in California courthouses. After the U.S. Supreme Court confirmation hearings for Justice Brett Kavanaugh in 2018, Cantil-Sakauye publicly renounced her Republican Party affiliation, saying she was concerned about increasing political polarization.

I recently spoke to Cantil-Sakauye, 62, about her career and her decision to retire. We also talked about what's been happening at the U.S. Supreme Court, including the leak of the draft decision overturning Roe v. Wade, and what's next for her and California's judicial system.

Here's our conversation, lightly edited for clarity and space:

You've said you're choosing to retire now because you're proud of what you've accomplished on the court. What are you most proud of? Is it a certain case?

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I look back with warmth and pride that the Supreme Court in the last 12 years has brought on five new justices — five people who were basically strangers to each other. And we've come together. We have trust and collegiality and we try out ideas on each other. And we evolve together, we learn — I learn from my colleagues.

So I'm proud that we have been able to maintain that civility and trust over the decades. It's not any particular case. It's our way we approach all cases, which has made working with them such a joy, and very hard to leave.

That spirit of compromise on the bench feels particularly impressive in light of the divisiveness on the U.S. Supreme Court. How have you been able to maintain that collegiality?

Five members currently on our seven-member court were appointed by Democrats, either Gov. Jerry Brown or Gov. Gavin Newsom. And two of us were appointed by Governor Schwarzenegger. And we're pretty diverse —ethnically, gender, age-wise and experience.

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But we have a vetting process that really picks up the entirety of the person, in terms of their ability to be on a court of review and working collaboratively with others.

You identify as a centrist. Do you think having a moderate chief justice has helped with achieving consensus?

I think it doesn't hurt. My colleagues will say too, I think, that we understand our role as guiding the law, clarifying it for the lower courts, the practitioners and the public. So we may start off, for example, with a broad opinion, but as we each weigh in we start to narrow it because we realize we don't need to speak so broadly. We are more geared toward providing guidance and clarification on California law that I think makes the difference for why we are able to agree.

What was your reaction to the leak of the draft decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, which revealed that Roe v. Wade could be overturned? Did you feel the need to better secure drafts in your court?

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It was startling. It took us all aback. But we have not changed anything about our practice or procedure at all. We didn't think that could happen in our court. We just more remarked on the fact that, oh my goodness. This is not good for trust of the court and the development of robust ideas.

Do you have a short list for whom you want to replace you, or a preference for what their political ideology might be? Would you prefer another centrist?

I have, of course, people in mind if I were asked, and it's not based on their centrism but more that they have skills — people skills and legal skills and administrative skills and management skills — and as a result, I think they'll be open to this collaborative effort that was created in California to govern our judiciary.

Has Newsom asked you for any help picking your replacement?

No, he has not.

Do you know what you're going to do come January?

I do not know. I think that's probably a part of my anxiety — I've always known what I was going to be doing in the next January.

You recently said in an interview that you were done with politics. Is that still true?

That's still true, if not stronger than ever.

And finally, what would you say are the biggest challenges facing the state courts are right now?

The threat of sustainable funding. We are a third branch of government, but we lobby for our budget in the same way as any other entity that's state-funded. We don't have a say in the budget process except to make the ask.

When I first started this work as chief justice, our budget was slashed by billions. We were closing courthouses. We were closing services. We were on furlough. When I was an appellate justice, I worked without pay, like so many of my colleagues, to keep our doors open. We rely on the civic understanding of the executive branch and the legislative branch for our existence. And I think that's always a threat.

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Bill Cosby is seeking a new trial after a jury in a civil case in June found that he had sexually assaulted Judy Huth when she was 16.Associated Press

The rest of the news

  • Cosby appeal: Bill Cosby's lawyers have announced they are seeking a new trial in a civil case in which a jury found he sexually assaulted Judy Huth when she was 16.
  • Wildfire causes: Why does the Western United States have so many wildfires? Here are four key factors.
  • Monkeypox: Gov. Gavin Newsom declares a state of emergency as monkeypox spreads.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Overdose prevention: San Diego County will install a dozen vending machines dispersing naxolone, a substance used to counteract the effect of opioid overdose, across the city by the end of the year, The San Diego Union-Tribune reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Flash floods: Some roads in and out of Death Valley National Park have been closed after they were inundated over the weekend with mud and debris from flash floods, The Associated Press reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • McKinney fire: Two bodies were found inside a charred vehicle in the driveway of a home near the remote community of Klamath River in Siskiyou County, The Associated Press reports.A search-and-rescue team evacuated more than 60 hikers along the Pacific Crest Trail because of the blaze, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • S.F. school board: The San Francisco school board has scheduled a special meeting Tuesday to decide whether to admonish a board member, Ann Hsu, over racist comments she made about Black and brown parents in the district, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
  • World's tallest tree: Tourists who trek to the world's tallest tree, in Redwood National Park, will face possible jail time after park officials declared the remote area off-limits because of damage done by trampling visitors, The Associated Press reports.
Wayne Capili for Sotheby's International Realty

What you get

For $2.7 million: An English country-style home in Carmel Valley, a 1923 farmhouse in Laurel Canyon and a three-bedroom retreat a few blocks from the beach in Oceanside.

At Yangban Society, a restaurant in Los Angeles, Katianna Hong's matzo ball soup encapsulates the chef's identity as a Korean woman raised by a German Jewish father and an Irish Catholic mother.Lauren Justice for The New York Times

What we're eating

In Los Angeles, reimagining the cooking of the Korean diaspora.

Kayakers on the Noyo River.Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Susan Weikel Morrison, who recommends a trip in Mendocino County:

"Noyo Harbor, just south of Fort Bragg, is so utterly lovely and sublime. It's at the mouth of the Noyo River — with all the North Coast beauty and character but without the crowds of the more popular places.

The main hustle and bustle is on the water, with a near constant passing of small fishing boats and pleasure yachts, plus occasional canoes and Coast Guard cutters. You can rent the canoes and paddle yourself, or you can see harbor and sea on a small tour boat.

The land area features several picturesque restaurants with great food and harbor views, mostly serving locals, along with a number of marine service shops that make it clear that this is principally a working harbor rather than a tourist venue.

If you follow the street past the businesses, you'll come to the harbor entrance, where you can enjoy walking the beach, fishing from the pier, and the luscious sunsets over the ocean."

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.

One of the perhaps more recognizable screenshots from Geoguessr.Geoguessr

And before you go, some good news

Trevor Rainbolt, a 23-year-old online video producer in Los Angeles, is one of the world's greatest GeoGuessr players.

If you're unfamiliar with the game, the premise is simple: As you stare at a computer or phone, you're plopped down somewhere in the world in Google Street View and must guess, as quickly as you can, exactly where you are. You can click to travel down roads and through cities, scanning for distinguishable landmarks or language. The closer you guess, the more points you score.

Rainbolt is among an elite group who can identify within seconds whether an ordinary-looking street is in Lake Tahoe or Siberia or Japan. "It's like a magician," he said. "To the magician, the trick is easy, but to everyone else, it's a lot harder."

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

P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: ___ vide (cooking technique) (4 letters).

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

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