Playbook PM: Dems’ cruel summer gets a bit kinder

Presented by Facebook: POLITICO's must-read briefing on what's driving the afternoon in Washington.
Aug 10, 2022 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eli Okun

Presented by

Facebook

THE INVESTIGATIONS — If an FBI search of Mar-a-Lago wasn't enough for one week, another DONALD TRUMP investigation is heating up: The former president sat for a deposition today by New York A.G. TISH JAMES, who's been conducting a civil probe of the Trump Organization, AP's Michael Balsamo and Michael Sisak report .

But Trump pleaded the Fifth and refused to answer questions, claiming he'd done nothing wrong. "I have absolutely no choice because the current Administration and many prosecutors in this Country have lost all moral and ethical bounds of decency," Trump announced.

President Joe Biden gives a thumbs up as he boards Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2022. Biden is traveling to Kiawah Island, S.C., for vacation. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

"Zero," trumpeted President Joe Biden at the White House this morning, underlining the June-to-July inflation number. | Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP Photo

DEFLATION NATION — Democrats' run of good news — or, uh, not-quite-as-bad news — continued this morning with fresh signs that the worst of inflation may be behind us. The key takeaways:

  • Prices did not rise from June to July, beating economists' expectations, per new government data released today, as year-over-year inflation slowed from 9.1% to 8.5%.
  • Technically, if you don't round the numbers, prices actually ticked slightly lower overall — the first time in quite a while that anyone could claim deflation.
  • Gas prices, airfares, clothing costs and more tumbled downward last month, granting Americans some relief after many months of increases.
  • Core inflation, which excludes energy and food, stood at just 0.3% month over month.

"Zero," trumpeted President JOE BIDEN at the White House this morning, underlining the June-to-July inflation number.

The caveats: It's only one month of data. More importantly, inflation is running way hotter than the Fed's ideal 2%: Prices remain extremely elevated, squeezing pocketbooks across large swathes of the country. Among the categories that continued to see price increases in July were rent, groceries and electricity — in short, plenty of everyday essentials.

"All told, the July figures raised hope that inflation may have peaked after more than a year of relentless increases that have strained household finances, soured Americans on the economy, led the Federal Reserve to raise borrowing rates aggressively and diminished President Joe Biden's public approval ratings," writes AP's Christopher Rugaber .

A chart showing that year-over-year inflation was 8.5 percent in July.

Cristina Rivero/POLITICO

More on Dems' cruel summer getting a bit kinder …

— With almost all of the vote in from Minnesota's special congressional election Tuesday, Republican BRAD FINSTAD beat Democrat JEFF ETTINGER by 4 points — in a district Trump won by 10 points two years ago. More from the Star Tribune

Special elections can be wonky, but the result constituted another data point showing Democrats' fortunes improving this summer. Though Republicans are still favored to flip the House, election forecasters have begun reducing the size of the red wave they see coming. "The signs of a Democratic rebound post-Dobbs are starting to pile up," tweeted NYT's Nate Cohn .

— Biden landed another victory this morning as he signed the PACT Act into law today to help veterans who were exposed to toxic burn pits. In an East Room ceremony, the president touted the law's passage as evidence that he was right to call for bipartisanship.

"When I ran, I said one of the reasons I was running, one of the three reasons, was to unite the country, and I was roundly criticized for being naive: 'That was the old days, Joe, you used to be able to do that.' Well, guess what, I don't believe it. We never have failed to," Biden said. "This law is long overdue, but we finally got it done together. Together."

Good Wednesday afternoon. Sorry for the delay in this afternoon's Playbook PM — we had some technical issues.

A message from Facebook:

Facebook is taking action to keep its platform safe

Over 40 million people use Facebook Privacy Checkup each month. That's nearly 60 times the population of Washington, D.C. That's just one example of the work we're doing to create safer connections.

Learn more about our work ahead.

 

TRUMP CARDS

MAR-A-LAGO LATEST — ERIC TRUMP told the Daily Mail's Katelyn Caralle that the FBI did not leave a warrant or manifest when they searched Mar-a-Lago this week — seemingly contradicting Trump lawyer CHRISTINA BOBB, who said she got a copy of the warrant .

— Death threats against A.G. MERRICK GARLAND, FBI Director CHRISTOPHER WRAY and FBI agents on social media have risen this week since the Mar-a-Lago search, Fox News' David Spunt and Danielle Wallace report . "Fox News is told there are discussions to potentially increase their security."

ALL POLITICS

SPECIAL MEASURES — A new ad from the DCCC and Democrat PAT RYAN in this month's New York special congressional election goes all in on abortion, per Axios' Andrew Solender and Josh Kraushaar : "The sad truth? MARC MOLINARO and the Republicans oppose a woman's right to choose." It's a swing district that could provide more clues to November, and Democrats are stepping up their play on the airwaves after being significantly outspent by the GOP so far.

AD WARS — AdImpact estimates that political ad buys will hit nearly $9.7 billion this year — a staggering sum that's higher than even the 2020 cycle, which included a presidential campaign, WSJ's John McCormick scooped . That would more than double the $4 billion spent in 2018, the last midterm cycle. The report

KARI ON — Arizona GOP gubernatorial nominee KARI LAKE has embraced far-right positions and election denialism, but the former TV anchor retains an advantage that many other MAGA insurgent candidates lack: camera-ready polish and longtime familiarity with voters, NYT's Michael Bender reports from Phoenix. She has no campaign manager — and unlike some other Republicans these days, she is engaging with the press. "I am beloved by people, and I'm not saying that to be boastful," Lake tells Bender. "I was in their homes for the good times and the bad times." On the trail, Lake "blurs the line between seriousness and showmanship" with finesse, he writes, drawing big crowds and even stirring 2024 VP chatter if she wins.

Former Gov. JAN BREWER, no shrinking violet herself, "described Ms. Lake's primary campaign as mean, untruthful and untethered to public policy. 'She went so far to the right that I don't know if she can recover,' Ms. Brewer said in an interview. 'And if she can't, we'll have a Democratic governor.' Ms. Brewer said she'd support Ms. Lake only if she promised to prioritize policy and tell the truth about elections."

PIVOT TIME — Having just landed the GOP nomination for governor in Wisconsin, TIM MICHELS' campaign website quickly removed "Endorsed by President Trump" from his bio, NYT's Reid Epstein spotted .

BETO SPEAKS — Texas Democratic gubernatorial nominee BETO O'ROURKE told Fox News' Paul Steinhauser that his own party bears much of the blame for its declining recent numbers among Hispanics: "taking for granted voters that have reliably voted for Democrats in the past and assuming they will do in the future, and literally phoning in the work."

 

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

SURVEY SAYS — A plurality of registered voters think the reconciliation bill's climate and energy provisions hit the sweet spot in addressing climate change, according to our new POLITICO/Morning Consult polling. Here's the breakdown of different high-profile provisions:

  • Investing about $369 billion in climate and energy programs over the next 10 years: Goes too far: 30%. Just right: 37%. Doesn't go far enough: 16%. 
  • Offering tax credits for individuals to use to buy electric vehicles: Goes too far: 29%. Just right: 34%. Doesn't go far enough: 18%.
  • Providing $60 billion in incentives for clean energy manufacturing in the U.S.: Goes too far: 26%. Just right: 41%. Doesn't go far enough: 16%.
  • Offering tax credits to consumers who put certain renewable energy items in their households, such as rooftop solar and electric water heaters: Goes too far: 19%. Just right: 48%. Doesn't go far enough: 16%. Toplines Crosstabs

MORE ON HOW IT'S PLAYING — The reconciliation bill's drug pricing reforms could have a significant impact on older Americans, some of whom are expected to save up to thousands of dollars a year, NYT's Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Noah Weiland report . "To hear the voices of older Americans who confront high drug costs month in and month out is to hear fear and worry, anger and stress," they write. "Many say they are figuring out how to get by, skipping vacations and other niceties for which they saved." And some envision relief from the Inflation Reduction Act — even as opponents suggest the bill will damage pharmaceutical innovation.

THE BASED GOD OF THE SENATE — Sen. MIKE LEE's (R-Utah) office confirmed to HuffPost's Amanda Terkel that the senator himself is behind the @BasedMikeLee Twitter account , which The Salt Lake Tribune's Bryan Schott first reported Tuesday, citing a source close to Lee. Among many serious and political tweets, Lee's missives have also included comments like "I'm taller than @RandPaul," "The haters can't handle this frickin' smoke," and "This account is no cap — bussin, forreal forreal."

 

A message from Facebook:

Advertisement Image

 

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

WHISKEY TANGO FOXTROT — The Justice Department has charged Iranian operative SHAHRAM POURSAFI in a plot to murder former national security adviser JOHN BOLTON. According a statement from DOJ , Poursafi attempted to pay individuals $300,000 in the U.S. to murder Bolton beginning in October 2021, likely in retaliation for the January 2020 death of Iranian military commander QASEM SOLEIMANI. Bolton tweeted a statement thanking the FBI and Secret Service for their work: "While much cannot be said publicly right now, one point is indisputable: Iran's leaders are liars, terrorists and enemies of the United States." More from the AP

DANCE OF THE SUPERPOWERS — The U.S. increasingly sees China's exercises around Taiwan as "not just a reaction to the speaker's brief visit, but a turning point in China's strategy" — and Biden officials are pledging not to pull back from their operations in the Taiwan Strait, report NYT's David Sanger, Eric Schmitt and Ben Dooley .

AUSTIN TICE LATEST — A decade into the American journalist's abduction in Syria, Biden said in a statement this morning that the U.S. "know[s] with certainty that he has been held by the Syrian regime," the most explicit the government has yet been in accusing BASHAR ASSAD's regime of holding Tice. More from CNN

POLICY CORNER

ALARM BELL RINGING — "'People will die waiting': America's system for the disabled is nearing collapse," by Dan Goldberg: "Providers for intellectually and developmentally disabled struggle to recruit and retain staff amid soaring inflation, pandemic burnout."

WAR IN UKRAINE

LATEST ON THE GROUND — Ukrainian officials are indicating responsibility for a set of explosions that rocked Russian-occupied Crimea — which presages "a critical new phase of the war," Christopher Miller reports from Kyiv. Though Russia claimed the explosions were simply an accident, Ukraine said they marked the start of the counteroffensive. A strike in Crimea, which Russia invaded in 2014, "would be deeply embarrassing for President VLADIMIR PUTIN who would likely view it as a dramatic escalation and a blow to his troops' morale."

— In the Donbas, Ukraine is still holding the line after more than a month of preventing major Russian advances, though Moscow's strikes are destroying Ukrainian towns nonetheless, WSJ's Yaroslav Trofimov reports from a Bakhmut under fire.

 

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 .

 
 

VALLEY TALK

FACEBOOK UNDER FIRE — A new report finds that despite Facebook's ban on white nationalism, more than a hundred pages and groups with ties to white supremacist/hate groups remain on the platform, WaPo's Naomi Nix scooped . And the Tech Transparency Project found that "Facebook continues to serve ads against searches for white-supremacist content, such as the phrases Ku Klux Klan and American Defense Skinheads, a longtime criticism of civil rights groups." The company said it's working to fix its systems.

PLAYBOOKERS

MEDIA MOVE — WaPo media columnist Margaret Sullivan is leaving the paper. She'll become a visiting professor at Duke and work on book projects. "It's been quite a ride and a great privilege," Sullivan tweeted .

NEW APPOINTMENT — Biden announced he'll tap Monica Bertagnolli as the next director of the National Cancer Institute. She currently is a Harvard Medical School professor in surgical oncology, a surgeon at Brigham and Women's Hospital and a member of the Gastrointestinal Cancer and Sarcoma Disease Centers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

TRANSITIONS — Georgeanne Usova is now national director of legislative affairs for Planned Parenthood Federation of America. She most recently was senior legislative counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union. … Peter Hoffman is now comms director for the Senate Environment and Public Works GOP. He previously was press secretary for Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.).

 

Sponsored Survey

WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU: Please take a short, 1 minute survey about one of our advertising partners.

 
 

Follow us on Twitter

Rachael Bade @rachaelmbade

Eugene Daniels @EugeneDaniels2

Ryan Lizza @RyanLizza

Eli Okun @eliokun

Garrett Ross @garrett_ross

 

Subscribe to the POLITICO Playbook family

Playbook  |  Playbook PM  |  California Playbook  |  Florida Playbook  |  Illinois Playbook  |  Massachusetts Playbook  |  New Jersey Playbook  |  New York Playbook  |  Ottawa Playbook  |  Brussels Playbook  |  London Playbook

View all our politics and policy newsletters

Follow us

Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Instagram Listen on Apple Podcast
 

To change your alert settings, please log in at https://www.politico.com/_login?base=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.politico.com/settings

This email was sent to ateebhassan000.ravian@blogger.com by: POLITICO, LLC 1000 Wilson Blvd. Arlington, VA, 22209, USA

Please click here and follow the steps to unsubscribe.

California Today: L.A.’s new encampment ban

The City Council voted on Tuesday to prohibit homeless people from setting up tents within 500 feet of public and private schools and day care centers.

Because of a technical error, several paragraphs were missing from this morning's newsletter, so we're re-sending the full version. We apologize for the mistake.

Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Wednesday. Los Angeles officials voted Tuesday to greatly limit where in the city unhoused people can sleep. Plus, San Bernardino County voters will decide whether their government should study secession from California.

A tent in downtown Los Angeles.Mark Abramson for The New York Times

In a highly contested move, Los Angeles this week significantly expanded restrictions on where homeless people can sleep as the city, the nation's second largest, grapples with its housing crisis.

The Los Angeles City Council voted on Tuesday to prohibit homeless people from setting up tents within 500 feet of public and private schools and day care centers, during a contentious meeting that demonstrators halted for nearly an hour and that resulted in injuries to two police officers and one arrest.

The Council's decision reflects how severe the region's housing crisis has become, experts say.

"We are in that really tragic position of having to talk about balancing where people who are unhoused are sleeping," said Gary Dean Painter, a professor at the University of Southern California Sol Price School of Public Policy. "We shouldn't be making that choice."

Before passing the restrictions on an 11-3 vote, Los Angeles officials had approved a few dozen places where people were banned from sitting, sleeping, lying or storing property. But the City Council introduced the latest measure after Alberto M. Carvalho, the Los Angeles Unified School District superintendent, raised concerns, saying young students were being traumatized by what they saw on their way to class.

ADVERTISEMENT

"Those who have argued that this doesn't solve homelessness, doesn't move us forward in this area, are absolutely right — but not on point," said Councilman Gil Cedillo, who voted for the new rules. "The point of this measure is not to solve homelessness at all. The point of this measure is to protect safe passage to schools."

The impacts of the policy remain unclear, but they are expected to be sweeping. One councilman estimated that it would bump the number of banned sites to 2,000 from 200.

Kenneth Mejia, who is running for Los Angeles city attorney, calculated that the rules would make 20 percent of the city off-limits to encampments. In some corners of the city, that figure could be as high as 48 percent, he estimated.

Steve Diaz, who spoke at Tuesday's meeting against the new rules, said the restrictions were a way to "create redlining across the city of L.A." under the auspices of improving children's well-being.

ADVERTISEMENT

"If it was really about children's safety," Diaz told the Council, "you would be investing more money in permanent supportive housing, wraparound services and ensuring that people were able to access housing as needed, and not into increased policing."

Officials in California and the West have been restricted from banning encampments after a 2018 court decision determined that criminalizing homelessness violated the U.S. Constitution. In the decision, Martin v. Boise, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that prosecuting people for sleeping in public amounted to cruel and unusual punishment when no shelter beds are available.

But, as more people begin living on the streets, "liberal cities are doing everything in their power to get around Martin v. Boise," said Ananya Roy, a professor and housing justice advocate for U.C.L.A. "It's not an effort to alleviate poverty, it's an effort to manage visible poverty and get it out of sight."

Jason Ward, associate director of the RAND Center on Housing and Homelessness in Los Angeles, said that enforcing the city's new law would most likely be complicated and costly. And he said the city needed to focus on increasing the housing stock if it didn't want its homelessness problem to worsen.

ADVERTISEMENT

"We're creating new people that will be camping on the streets every day," Ward told me. "A lot of people look at this problem in isolation, but I see it as inextricably linked to the fact that we don't have enough housing in this region."

For more:

A pop-up monkeypox vaccination site in Los Angeles.Caroline Brehman/EPA, via Shutterstock

The rest of the news

  • Monkeypox vaccines: California communities will be able to vaccinate more people for monkeypox by using a different technique that relies on one-fifth the current dosage, The Los Angeles Times reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Secession: Voters in San Bernardino County will soon get to say whether they want the county to study options that include seceding from the state, The Associated Press reports. The State Legislature and Congress would have to approve actual secession.
  • Landing: The pilot and a passenger of a small airplane escaped safely after their aircraft landed and caught fire on State Route 91, The Associated Press reports.
  • Union: The Los Angeles teachers' union is demanding a withdrawal of extra school days, The Los Angeles Times reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Sales tax: Fresno County voters will decide in November whether to increase the local sales tax to benefit Fresno State academic and athletics programs, The Fresno Bee reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Housing approval: Gov. Gavin Newsom began an unprecedented review of San Francisco's housing approval process, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
  • Abuse: A San Jose State gymnast says that she and her teammates endured their coach's emotional abuse on top of sexual abuse from a trainer, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Antifa: The Natomas Unified School District paid a teacher three years' salary to resign after he was secretly recorded professing his allegiance to antifa, The Sacramento Bee reports.
Jim Bartsch for Sotheby's International Realty

What you get

For $4 million: A Spanish-style retreat in Santa Barbara, a grand 1933 home in the Hollywood Hills and a Mediterranean-style house in Long Beach.

Caroline Gutman for The New York Times

What we're eating

An empty beach at Half Moon Bay.Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Leslie McLean, who lives in Sonoma. Leslie recommends a trip to Half Moon Bay, just south of San Francisco:

"We walk along the beach, savoring the cooler weather. We eat delicious clam chowder at Sam's Chowder House. And we always visit all the many nurseries, ranging from carnivorous plants to orchids to lavender to California natives to succulents to our favorite, large mom-and-pop nursery called Half Moon Bay Nursery. They blast opera on their speakers and we fill our truck with gorgeous plants every time we visit. It is a mecca of vegetative beauty."

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.

Green Day performing during the Outside Lands Music Festival in San Francisco on Saturday.Ethan Swope/San Francisco Chronicle, via Associated Press

And before you go, some good news

Near the end of their set at Outside Lands on Saturday, Green Day invited an audience member onstage.

"Who knows how to play guitar?" the band's frontman, Billie Joe Armstrong, called to the crowd.

Armstrong chose a 10-year-old boy to play with them, and threw a guitar around the young performer. The boy then played the chords for "Knowledge," a cover of a song by Operation Ivy, which, like Green Day, is a rock band from Berkeley.

This is how the rest of the boy's performance went down, from SFGate:

"The boy kept going — and the crowd roared far louder than any other moment in the show. One woman standing behind me was sobbing and screaming at the same time.

When Armstrong asked the boy his name, he replied it was Montgomery. Armstrong told the boy he'd call him Monty — and the crowd started chanting his new rock star name.

'Oh, and you can keep the guitar,' Armstrong said."

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

P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Deep purple fruit (4 letters).

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

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for California Today from The New York Times.

To stop receiving these emails, unsubscribe or manage your email preferences.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebooktwitterinstagram

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018