Playbook PM: GOP rallies around Trump, Dems celebrate CHIPS

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Aug 09, 2022 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eli Okun

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Former President Donald Trump speaks at a rally.

Much of the GOP is rallying around Donald Trump. | Morry Gash/AP Photo

One of the most striking features of contemporary American politics is the degree to which its participants cast their work in existential terms for democracy. Policy achievements, campaign disputes and even law enforcement activities play out not just for their own sakes but on the grander battlefield of the American republic's future.

Republicans' reaction to the FBI's search of Mar-a-Lago has been a prime example. National figures (and not just the Trumpiest ones) are warning — as yet, without any evidence — that it could constitute politicization of the Justice Department and undermine the rule of law. Today, everyone from former VP MIKE PENCE to Virginia Gov. GLENN YOUNGKIN jumped aboard that train — though Sen. TIM SCOTT (R-S.C.) and former New Jersey Gov. CHRIS CHRISTIE , other 2024 possibilities, notably did not.

DONALD TRUMP put out a new video on Truth Social that feels like a campaign ad, per Fox News , covering everything from Ukraine to inflation and intoning, "We are a nation that has weaponized its law enforcement against the opposing political party like never before."

As the GOP rallies around Trump, Republican Study Committee members are scheduled to dine with him tonight at his club in Bedminster, N.J., per Punchbowl's Jake Sherman . And Trump world is watching which Republicans have leapt to his defense quickly enough, Meridith McGraw reports .

"It's all a reminder of the state of our current politics — any allegation that Trump committed wrongdoing is treated by most Republicans as a loyalty test of the former president," NBC's Chuck Todd, Ben Kamisar, Bridget Bowman and Alexandra Marquez wrote this morning. "Lather, rinse, repeat."

Reality check: If the FBI search does turn out to be just about improperly taking classified White House materials, "bringing a case will be difficult and — if successful — even the punishment would be open to legal fights," Bloomberg's Erik Larson and Zoe Tillman report .

MEANWHILE, AT THE WHITE HOUSE — President JOE BIDEN signed the CHIPS and Science Act into law this morning. Fighting off a lingering cough, the president touted the law's impact on creating jobs and inspiring a new generation of innovation. Taking a victory lap after a string of legislative victories, Biden said Washington had met the moment: "a moment when we bet on ourselves, believed in ourselves and recaptured the story, the spirit and the soul of this nation."

Here too, Democratic leaders lauded domestic semiconductor chips manufacturing as proof of concept for democracy working. "We will show that democracy will always be the best system to govern in a tumultuous world," Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER declared. "We are showing the world that America can get things done in a bipartisan way when it manners," said Commerce Secretary GINA RAIMONDO.

Already, the industry announcements are rolling in, per Bloomberg's Jenny Leonard : Micron Technology pledged to plow $40 billion into manufacturing, creating a whopping 40,000 jobs. And Qualcomm and GlobalFoundries are announcing a $4.2 billion manufacturing plan.

A TAXING BATTLE — The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled today that the House Ways and Means Committee can obtain Trump's tax returns from the IRS. It's the latest twist in a yearslong saga after Trump refused to make them public — and though the panel said they expect to get the forms "immediately," it's likely not the last one, as the former president is expected to appeal. More from CNN The ruling

Good Tuesday afternoon. The White House monkeypox response team and public health officials will brief at 3:30 p.m. (ICYMI: They're expected to announce a new dose-sparing strategy to administer vaccines differently and stretch limited supplies across more people.)

BULLETIN — Average gas prices nationwide have now dropped below $4 per gallon for the first time in five months, per GasBuddy .

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JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH

COMMITTEE LATEST — Pennsylvania GOP gubernatorial nominee DOUG MASTRIANO cut off his interview today with the House Jan. 6 committee after 15 minutes, vowing to sue the panel and declining to answer their questions, per NYT's Luke Broadwater .

— A new Monmouth poll finds that the committee's blockbuster recent hearings haven't changed public opinion about Trump and Jan. 6 much. Americans' overall favorability rating for Trump sits at about the same level it did after he lost reelection two years ago.

CONGRESS

SPEAKER SPEAKS — Speaker NANCY PELOSI defended her Taiwan trip as "worth it," and said the visit had received disproportionate attention in interviews this morning on NBC's "Today" show and MSNBC's "Morning Joe." She also hammered Chinese President XI JINPING as "acting like a scared bully," "in a fragile place," struggling with the economy and "his own insecurities." More from NBC

Asked about the FBI's Mar-a-Lago search, Pelosi largely demurred: "No one is above the law — not even a president or a former president of the United States. But all of this will, I'm sure, be made known to us over time."

THE WHITE HOUSE

WHAT COMES NEXT — The president is riding somewhat high after a series of victories, but now he's about to embark on a lengthy vacation, which "has increased questions about whether the president will begin to reap political benefits of the successes," report Chris Cadelago and Jonathan Lemire . Now Democrats are working hard to figure out how to translate the legislative wins into a political boost, lining up ad campaigns, new events, Cabinet travel and a narrative shift for the fall. "Already the victories have enlivened beleaguered supporters and injected new optimism across the West Wing. Aides describe a burst of energy in the executive mansion."

— Now, there's "a frenetic 91-day sprint to sell the [reconciliation] package by November — and win over an electorate that has grown skeptical of Democratic rule," NYT's Shane Goldmacher and Katie Glueck report . Dems are feeling a sudden burst of hope. "For Democrats, the best salespeople may not be the political leaders at all," they add — like seniors advocacy groups on drug pricing reform and environmentalists on climate action.

BEHIND THE BILL — The reconciliation bill's historic climate investments mark the apotheosis of a revamped Democratic strategy on fighting climate change that shifted from penalties to incentives over the past decade, AP's Chris Megerian reports . Scarred by the failures of Obama-era cap and trade legislation and a 2018 Washington state carbon tax effort, the Biden White House pushed to organize green groups, unions and industry behind clean energy carrots.

STEF FELDMAN, domestic policy adviser: "He had seen President [BARACK] OBAMA work very hard to get cap and trade over the finish line … He knew that we had to try something different."

MEMEOLOGY — The Daily Beast's Sam Brodey, Ursula Perano and Will Sommer unpack Democrats' embrace of the "Dark Brandon" Biden alter ego meme, as the White House and its allies try to reclaim a taunt with some wind in their sails. "A half-joking attempt from Democrats to match MAGA trolling with trolling of their own has now, unexpectedly, become a somewhat legitimate messaging strategy," as Dems look to build momentum off their recent successes. "Dealing with Trump and Republicans during and after the 2020 campaign convinced the Biden team that mockingly embracing the other side's online attacks could have a strategic advantage."

 

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 .

 
 

ALL POLITICS

RED WAVE — Internal GOP polls show tight races in four House seats that Biden won by double digits across California, Colorado and Oregon — a potential harbinger of major Republican gains in November, Ally Mutnick reports . That includes a 7-point lead for Republican MIKE ERICKSON over progressive Democrat ANDREA SALINAS for a Biden +14 open seat in Oregon "that Democrats drew to be safe." GOP polling also shows Democrats up just 2 points in retiring Rep. ED PERLMUTTER's Colorado district and up 5 in retiring Rep. PETER DEFAZIO's Oregon district. Grain of salt for internal polls, of course, but "the surveys are also an encouraging sign" for the GOP in blue areas post-Roe v. Wade.

ABORTION IMPACT — Michigan Democrats are seeking to mobilize and persuade women in the midterms around the end of Roe, WaPo's Hannah Knowles reports from Mason. She talks to one "pro-life," Trump-supporting mom who says she'll vote for a ballot initiative to enshrine abortion rights — and isn't sure if she'll support Republicans because of their opposition. "Democrats expect [the ballot question] to supercharge an issue they have already been emphasizing in their campaigns and turn out voters who will also pull the lever for their party's candidates."

AD WARS — The DSCC is going up with its first general-election ads against Sen. RON JOHNSON (R-Wis.) across TV and digital, hammering the incumbent over tax breaks for the wealthy and abortion. More from NBC

— Rep. JARED GOLDEN (D-Maine), is largely running away from his party in a new ad : "I was the only Democrat to vote against trillions of dollars of President Biden's agenda because I knew it would make inflation worse. I stood with law enforcement against defunding the police. I support cutting the gas tax and increasing domestic oil production."

 

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TRUMP CARDS

DISCLOSED — After another lengthy legal battle, the Trump campaign said in a new filing that it won't enforce NDAs, per OMAROSA MANIGAULT NEWMAN's attorney, JOHN PHILLIPS .

GUNS IN AMERICA

UVALDE FALLOUT — The school massacre in Uvalde, Texas, has prompted a wave of advocacy for gun regulations and renewed political engagement in a Trump county, WSJ's Elizabeth Findell reports from the town. That's "pushing local political leaders, including Democrats and Republicans, to embrace moderate changes to gun laws." And Democrat JOHN LIRA, a long-shot contender against GOP Rep. TONY GONZALES, is trying to draw a contrast with the congressman by calling for red-flag laws and other restrictions.

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

FOR RUSSIA, WITH LOVE — BEN SWANN, a U.S. journalist who promoted Pizzagate and other conspiracy theories, is creating four anti-American TV shows backed by Russian state media to be aired across Asia, Africa and South America, Axios' Lachlan Markay reports . "Swann's production company will receive more than $5 million to produce the four shows, each of which will consist of 50 episodes … The topics set to be covered in Swann's new shows mirror Russian state talking points on the pernicious roles of the U.S. and NATO in global affairs."

CLIMATE FILES — U.S. restrictions on imports from Xinjiang are hampering the solar industry as it tries to figure out how to manage supply chain disruptions, WSJ's Phred Dvorak and Katherine Blunt report . "Companies must prove that imports weren't produced by forced labor, and the level of documentation required by authorities so far has caught many in the industry off guard, analysts say."

 

INTRODUCING POWER SWITCH: The energy landscape is profoundly transforming. Power Switch is a daily newsletter that unlocks the most important stories driving the energy sector and the political forces shaping critical decisions about your energy future, from production to storage, distribution to consumption. Don't miss out on Power Switch, your guide to the politics of energy transformation in America and around the world. SUBSCRIBE TODAY .

 
 

PLAYBOOKERS

OUT AND ABOUT — A #BringAustinHome banner was unveiled this morning at WaPo's headquarters, as we hit the 10-year mark since journalist Austin Tice was abducted in Syria. SPOTTED: Debra Tice, Fred Ryan, Sally Buzbee, Josh Geltzer, Bill McCarren, Clayton Weimers, Katherine Jacobsen and Stephen Dreyer. Pics

ENGAGED — Bryn Woollacott , military legislative assistant for Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-Colo.), and Patrick MacDonnell, speechwriter for Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), got engaged July 31 in Georgetown.

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Sophia Lalani, senior national security adviser to USAID Administrator Samantha Power and a Cory Booker alum, and Ali Cumber , VP of the industrial goods and services group at Kaiser Associates, welcomed Kais Yaqim Cumber on July 30. He came in at 5 lbs, 15 oz, and joins big brother Reza. Kais is an Arabic name meaning "wise," and Yaqim is the name of his maternal grandfather.

 

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California Today: A basketball player’s Hollywood niche

Dane DiLiegro found his theatrical calling playing monsters onscreen and dreams of more in Los Angeles.
Author Headshot

By Shawn Hubler

California Correspondent, National

It's Tuesday. Here's an L.A. story. Plus, gas prices are falling fast.

Dane DiLiegro as the Predator in "Prey."Photo by David Bukach

Los Angeles, like its signature art form, is constantly evolving, but some L.A. stories don't change.

Three years ago, Dane DiLiegro came to Hollywood, having spent most of his life as an athlete. He had played basketball, first at his Massachusetts high school, then at the University of New Hampshire, and then, for eight adventure-filled years, professionally in Europe.

He had other dreams and skills, too, but at 31, he was struggling to deploy them. He dreamed, for example, of being the next Anthony Bourdain, hosting a show on culinary travel. At one point, between seasons, he apprenticed in Italy with the famed Tuscan butcher Dario Cecchini. He even worked up a YouTube show to pitch to producers, telling the camera that it would be "kind of like life — life, you don't really live for a direction, you live for the adventure, you live in the moment."

Also, as he told me earlier this year, when I met him, "no matter how good you are, the career of a professional athlete is finite." But at 6 feet 8½ inches tall, he was somewhat typecast, job-wise. He doubted his stay would be long in Los Angeles.

But typecasting in Los Angeles is in the eye of the beholder. A few years prior, a film company had come to Boston and was looking for actors. On the advice of an admirer — OK, his mom — DiLiegro, home for a visit, had answered the ad. He didn't get a role, but a year or two later, while he was visiting his parents again, the company called back, looking for a muscular stand-in.

"I ended up just standing around the set all day, talking to the stunt coordinator," he remembered. But the stunt coordinator had a suggestion — what he would do, were he not a stunt coordinator but an affable, hardworking, 6 foot 8½ inch basketball player looking to make a career change.

"Dude, you need to be in monster movies," he said.

Dane DiLiegro, center, as the Muscle Monster in the 2020 television series "Sweet Home."Dane DiLiegro

That is how DiLiegro landed in a Los Angeles subculture as time-honored as Conan the Barbarian and the former athlete who played him. Armed with a couple of names and his YouTube travel series, DiLiegro came west.

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There were no takers for the travel show, but one producer was shooting in Korea for Netflix and needed someone to play "a mutated human the size of a door who would smash through walls and chase people and crush them." Was DiLiegro interested?

He was.

"I had to wear this foam latex suit that weighed 80 pounds," he recalled. "My feet were four inches off the floor and my toes stuck out four inches. I weighed 320 pounds with that suit, and foam latex is a sponge, so the weight would increase as the day went by. I had never acted before. OK, in summer camp I think I did drama but it was, like, an elective."

Never mind. He had caught the bug. Plus, now he was stuck in Los Angeles: The pandemic hit by the time the Korean shoot wrapped, leaving him and millions of others with little to do but stay home and watch Netflix.

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So he learned how to mime. He studied acting. He stuck with it, even during the dry spells and disappointments. Soon — like zombies, but in a good way — offers began to beget offers.

There was a small part in "Monsters of California," a movie directed by the former lead singer of Blink-182, Tom DeLonge, "where kids go looking for monsters and find them," he said. There was a larger part in a Disney+ series called "The Quest." ("I played the Dragior, this forest god — kids are trying to get a power gem from me and have to complete tasks to essentially defeat me.")

He played Ba'al, a fertility demon, in "American Horror Stories." Since Friday, he's been streaming on Hulu as the Predator in "Prey," the franchise's new prequel. ("I was told to bring a balletic svelte-ness to this creature," he said. "The No. 1 word the director used was 'feral.'")

Now he lives in West Hollywood when he's not on location, and spends his spare time studying masters such as Doug Jones, who starred in "Pan's Labyrinth" and "Hellboy."

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"People don't realize," he said. "There's a lot of nuance that goes into playing a monster. With each movement, your body is telling a story."

And because his is an L.A. story, DiLiegro hasn't stopped dreaming.

"Someday, I hope to play a human, too," he said.

For more:

  • What to watch this summer.
  • Judging by social media feeds, "Prey," which became available on Friday, was last weekend's most popular movie, Scott Mendelson at Forbes writes, though it might not have been a box office hit had it been in theaters.
An effective altruism panel during the Crypto Bahamas conference in Nassau, Bahamas, last April.Erika P. Rodriguez for The New York Times

If you read one story, make it this

Effective altruism, which argues that people should do good in ways that are clearsighted, ambitious and unsentimental, used to be a loose, Internet-enabled affiliation of the like-minded. Now it's "a broadly influential faction, especially in Silicon Valley, and controls philanthropic resources on the order of $30 billion," The New Yorker reports. In a profile of one of the movement's leaders, Gideon Lewis-Kraus writes about the proximity to wealth and power that has challenged "E.A."

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The entertainment lawyer Bert Fields in 2008 in his chauffeur-driven Bentley. His clients included Hollywood stars, studio heads, and directors and producers.Monica Almeida/The New York Times

The rest of the news

  • Gas prices: The price of gas has dropped since its June peak by nearly a dollar a gallon in California, and is falling fast, ABC7 News reports.
  • Unemployment: California's unemployment insurance agency has been blasted for delays and improper denials by a new report from the state Legislative Analyst's Office, The Sacramento Bee reports.
  • Bert Fields: The renowned Hollywood lawyer whose A-list clients included the Beatles, Michael Jackson, Tom Cruise and Madonna, died at his home in Malibu on Sunday from complications of long Covid-19. He was 93.
  • Olivia Newton-John: The chart-topping performer who sang some of the biggest hits of the 1970s and '80s and starred in"Grease," one of the most popular movie musicals of its era, died on Monday at her ranch in Southern California. She was 73.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Sheriff: Los Angeles County prosecutors are convening a criminal grand jury to investigate whether the Sheriff's Department mishandled an incident in which a sheriff's deputy kneeled on a handcuffed inmate's head, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Cockfighting: The Department of Animal Services had to euthanize nearly 150 roosters after the authorities discovered a cockfighting event with about 200 people attending, The Associated Press reports.
  • Celebrity crash: The actor Anne Heche was in a coma on Monday and was under investigation in connection with driving under the influence and hit-and-run after she crashed her car on Friday into a Mar Vista house, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Manslaughter charges: A Los Angeles nurse who had been involved in 13 prior crashes was charged with six counts of murder and five counts of gross vehicular manslaughter on Monday in connection with a fiery crash last week in Windsor Hills, The Los Angeles Times reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • K-9: A driver was arrested during a traffic stop in Fresno County after a California Highway Patrol officer and K-9 found suspected narcotics in a hidden compartment inside the vehicle, The Fresno Bee reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Racial profiling: Fueled by racial prejudice and drug fear-mongering, officers in rural Siskiyou County are stopping the county's small population of Asian American drivers at 12 times the rate of other drivers, according to a new lawsuit in federal court, restricting their access to water and illegally placing liens on their property, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
  • Atherton public commenter: Marc Andreessen, a billionaire venture capitalist, has been among the state's most vocal advocates for construction of affordable housing — except, apparently, in Atherton, the ultrawealthy Bay Area suburb where he lives, The Atlantic reports.
  • McKinney tragedy: Kathy Shoopman, a longtime employee of the U.S. Forest Service, was among the four people killed in the McKinney fire, The Sacramento Bee reports.
  • Dead fish: Among the destruction caused by the McKinney fire are thousands of fish killed by debris in the Klamath River, impacting the local tribes who live on it.
  • District Attorney: The San Francisco district attorney, Brooke Jenkins, is officially running to remain in office, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
Bobbi Lin for The New York Times.

What we're eating

Green bean and tofu salad with peanut dressing.

If getting next to a giant sequoia in California's Yosemite National Park is a goal, head to the Tuolumne Grove of Giant Sequoias.Getty

Where we're traveling

In Yosemite National Park, hidden gems and roads less traveled.

What we're recommending

It's never too late to take up water polo. Look at Mark Braly of Davis. He's 86.

The Western Hills Nursery in Occidental contained many exotic plants such as this kennedia nigricans.Charlie Gesell for The New York Times

And before you go, some good news

In 2005, The New York Times published an article about Western Hills, a little plant nursery in Sonoma County:

"If you ask gardeners about their early influences, they often cite a parent or grandparent. But many serious gardeners in California — and throughout the country — are quick to mention Western Hills."

Founded in 1959, Western Hills has long been a destination for people looking for rare and unusual plants. Some of the most exquisite plant varieties in American gardens were first introduced there, considered a pocket of horticultural history.

But 12 years ago, the garden fell into disrepair and then foreclosure. A revitalization was underway in 2020, but was sidelined because of the pandemic.

That changed last fall, when a couple from Berkeley bought the three-acre nursery. They became entranced with the land's background as having inspired generations of gardens and romantics, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.

"We immediately felt a deep connection to the story of this place, and we feel our skill sets can help move it forward," the new owner, Hadley Dynak, said.

Thanks for reading. We'll be back tomorrow.

P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Director Coen (5 letters).

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

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