Playbook PM: Exclusive new poll on the FBI Mar-a-Lago search

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Aug 11, 2022 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Garrett Ross

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DEVELOPING — via the Cincinnati Enquirer : "The Clinton County Emergency Management Agency said law enforcement engaged in a firefight with a male in a gray shirt and body armor who fled from an area FBI field office. In a tweet, the FBI said an armed subject attempted to breach the visitor screening facility at the bureau's field office in Cincinnati. … After an alarm and response by special agents, the suspect fled north onto Interstate 71, the tweet states."

SURVEY SAYS — We've got an exclusive snap poll with Morning Consult that was conducted on Wednesday with some early reaction to the FBI's search of Mar-a-Lago.

Here's a breakdown of the most interesting findings:

Just about half of registered voters approve of the FBI search of Trump's Florida compound. Predictably, those numbers diverge a bit when broken down by party affiliation — with an overwhelming majority of Democrats approving, and a strong contingent of Republicans disapproving.

A chart shows the percentage of registered voters who approve and disapprove of the FBI's decision to conduct a search warrant on former President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.

When asked how they generally viewed the FBI's actions, voters were similarly split overall:

Question: Would you consider the FBI's decision to conduct a search warrant on former President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida to be:

  • An abuse of power that should be investigated: 41%
  • An abuse of power, but it should not be investigated: 6%
  • Not an abuse of power: 40%
  • Don't know/No opinion: 13%

And then there's this interesting tidbit: A majority of voters believe Trump either "definitely" or "probably" broke the law while he was president.

A chart shows the percentage of registered voters who think Donald Trump ever broke the law while he was president.

As for what this all means politically, it appears that Trump is benefitting from a small rally-around-the-flag effect among Republicans:

  • In mid-July , 53% of Republican voters and Republican-leaning independents said they would vote for Trump if the 2024 primary were being held today.
  • Our polling today finds Trump with 57%. The next closest candidate is Florida Gov. RON DESANTIS at 17% — down from 23% in the July poll. No other candidate breaks double digits.

See the results: Toplines Crosstabs

THE LOCAL ANGLE — "Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart faces political firestorm after signing Mar-a-Lago search warrant," by the Palm Beach Post's Jane Musgrave: "Those who worked with Reinhart during the decade he worked as a federal prosecutor in West Palm Beach said they are stunned by the misinformation and the malice being heaped on a magistrate who was simply doing his job."

Good Thursday afternoon.

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TRUMP CARDS

THE GEORGIA INVESTIGATION — "Trump hires attorney Findling to represent him in grand jury probe," by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution's Bill Rankin

THE ECONOMY

INFLATION DEFLATION — U.S. wholesale prices fell from June to July, according to a DOL report released today, marking the first month-to-month drop in two years, AP's Christopher Rugaber reports . It's yet another sign that inflation may be cooling a bit for consumers in the months ahead.

ALL POLITICS 

BIG DEM POLITICKING NEWS — DOUG THORNELL is taking over as CEO of SKDK, the company announced today, "making him one of only a few Black executives to lead a major public relations and political consulting firm," NYT's Shane Goldmacher notes . The significance: "With its close ties to the White House, SKDK has become one of the most influential U.S. political consultancies aligned with the Democratic Party, with veterans of the firm placed in important posts across the Biden administration." In 2022 already, SKDK has been involved with "about 20 House candidates, according to the firm, and several notable statewide races such as WES MOORE's run for governor in Maryland and Senator MARK KELLY's re-election bid in Arizona." And Thornell's ties run deep: He is a DNC, DCCC, DSCC and Congressional Black Caucus alum.

 

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 .

 
 

ABORTION FALLOUT

IN THE STATES — A handful of states — including Kentucky, Louisiana, Utah, North Dakota, Wyoming and West Virginia — have seen something of a whipsaw in the months since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, which has only led to "chaos and confusion," NYT's Allison McCann writes . "For abortion providers and patients, this has meant navigating a situation in which abortion may be allowed one day and banned the next. Providers have canceled procedures midday or told patients to wait on standby in the event that abortion becomes temporarily legal again. The legal back and forth has also frustrated opponents of abortion who saw the Dobbs decision as having settled the question of whether states can prohibit the procedure." Click through to the story for a great visual of the back-and-forth in each state

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

CLIMATE FILES — As the House prepares to pass Dems' climate-heavy reconciliation package on Friday, a damning new climate report is out today suggesting "that warming in the Arctic is happening at a much faster rate than many scientists had expected," WaPo's Chris Mooney, Brady Dennis and Sarah Kaplan write . It's just the latest in a string of signs that "the planet's changing climate isn't waiting around for human action."

GUNS IN AMERICA — "'Everybody Is Armed': As Shootings Soar, Philadelphia Is Awash in Guns," by NYT's Campbell Robertson: "So far in 2022, more than 1,400 people in the city have been shot, hundreds of them fatally, a higher toll than in the much larger cities of New York or Los Angeles. Alarms have sounded about gun violence across the country over the past two years, but Philadelphia is one of the few major American cities where it truly is as bad as it has ever been."

INFRASTRUCTURE YEAR — "166 infrastructure projects awarded billions in federal funding," by WaPo's Michael Laris

 

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POLICY CORNER

FOR YOUR RADAR — "U.S. Postal Service to temporarily hike prices for holiday season," by CNBC's Jack Stebbins

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

GRINER/WHELAN LATEST — Russia confirmed today "for the first time that negotiations between Washington and Moscow on a prisoner exchange are underway," WaPo's Robyn Dixon reports . "The Russian Foreign Ministry said talks are underway via a channel set up by President Biden and Russian President VLADIMIR PUTIN when they met in Geneva in June last year." The proposed deal would see BRITTNEY GRINER and PAUL WHELAN return to the U.S.

THE SPIN WAR — In China Watcher, Phelim Kine looks at "the media messaging duel between China and Taiwan's diplomatic outposts in Washington, D.C.," and finds that "House Speaker NANCY PELOSI's Taiwan trip last week exposed stark contrasts in the public messaging strategies." Sign up for the China Watcher newsletter to learn more

TICE LATEST — As we approach 10 years since AUSTIN TICE went missing, McClatchy's Michael Wilner reports that the "sprawling, multinational and often halting effort to get him back is showing signs of revival." Three months ago, Tice's parents, DEBRA and MARC, met with Biden in the Oval Office, where a frustrated president said that despite a Syria policy he thought would spur movement, he didn't know what else to do. "Well, this is a great day for me to be in your office," Debra Tice replied. Per McClatchy, "channels of communication through third parties that went dormant for months are back on, and direct contact between the United States and Syria is quietly underway, raising hopes that a serious negotiation is possible."

PULLOUT FALLOUT — "Beneath Kabul's surprising veneer of normalcy, a precarious balancing act," by WaPo's Pamela Constable

 

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PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION

FUN READ — "Of Course, the D.C. Zoo Has Its Own Police Force. (So Does the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.)" by WSJ's James Grimaldi: "The plethora of police in the capital is rooted in history, the U.S. Constitution's separation of powers and the establishment of the District of Columbia as the federal city, which is neither a state nor a federal entity. Neither is the zoo, a part of the Smithsonian Institution, which is a federal trust instrumentality created by Congress but not a part of the legislative branch. In other words, the National Zoo is neither fish nor fowl."

PLAYBOOKERS

IN MEMORIAM — "Gary Schroen, Who Led the C.I.A. Into Afghanistan, Dies at 80," by NYT's Clay Risen: "Gary C. Schroen, a veteran C.I.A. operative who, just weeks after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, led the first team of agents into Afghanistan to prepare for an invasion and begin the hunt for Osama bin Laden and his top lieutenants, died at his home in Alexandria, Va., on Aug. 1, one day after an American missile killed one of the last of those men, Ayman al-Zawahri. He was 80. … Mr. Schroen spent more than 30 years with the C.I.A., running agents and espionage operations across the Middle East. At 59, he was already 11 days into the agency's mandatory three-month retirement transition program when terrorists under bin Laden's command attacked the World Trade Center and the Pentagon."

TRANSITIONS — Bart Tessel is now chief innovation officer at the National Association of Wholesaler-Distributors. He previously was head of corporate development and M&A at ABB Optical Group. … Tristan Daedalus is now government affairs director at the White Coat Waste Project. He previously was with the American Horticulture Industry Association, and is a Pat Fallon and Matt Salmon alum.

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Andrew Bostjancic, policy and external affairs manager at Taylor & Francis Group, and Ashley Bostjancic, speech and language pathologist with the York Suburban School District, welcomed Cooper Steven Bostjancic on August 4. Pic

 

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Crawfordsburn Country Park: Five PSNI officers injured bringing crowd of 600 under control - two teens arrested - parents asked to know where their children are

Police in Ards and North Down have made two arrests following public disorder at Crawfordsburn Country Park yesterday evening, Wednesday August 10th.
 
 
     
   
     
  Aug 11, 2022  
     
 

Good afternoon again,

Here is a further update of what we have been working on in the newsroom.

 

 

 
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  Crawfordsburn Country Park: Five PSNI officers injured bringing crowd of 600 under control - two teens arrested - parents asked to know where their children are  
     
  Police in Ards and North Down have made two arrests following public disorder at Crawfordsburn Country Park yesterday evening, Wednesday August 10th.  
     
Crawfordsburn Country Park: Five  PSNI officers injured bringing crowd of 600 under control - two teens arrested - parents asked to know where their children are
     
 
Urgent appeal to locate 16-year-old girl last seen carrying tie dyed back pack
Urgent appeal to locate 16-year-old girl last seen carrying tie dyed back pack
 
Police are becoming increasingly concerned for the welfare of missing teenager, 16-year-old Amira Shamseldin, from Killyleagh.
 
     
 
Vegetarian women more likely to suffer hip fractures in later life, study shows
Vegetarian women more likely to suffer hip fractures in later life, study shows
 
Women who follow a vegetarian diet have a higher risk of breaking their hips in later life, a new study suggests.
 
     
 
Watch as police smash their way into car to rescue dog trapped in soaring heat
Watch as police smash their way into car to rescue dog trapped in soaring heat
 
Police have issued a warning to dog owners after sharing footage of officers breaking into a car to rescue a distressed animal trapped in soaring temperatures
 
     
     
     
   
     
     
     
   
 
 
   
 
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California Today: Will legislators restrict solitary confinement?

State legislators are weighing a bill that would greatly limit which prisoners can be confined and for how long.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Thursday. A state proposal would limit who can be placed in solitary and for how long. Plus, Associate Justice Patricia Guerrero could become the state's first Latina to lead the state Supreme Court.

A corrections officer looks through the window of a prison cell at the California Institution for Men in Chino.Monica Almeida/The New York Times

California legislators are weighing a major change to the state's criminal justice system: banning long-term solitary confinement.

Known as the California Mandela Act, a proposal in the State Legislature is part of a nationwide push to curb widespread use of solitary confinement amid concerns about the mental health ramifications and apparent racial inequity in its use. The state Senate Appropriations Committee must pass the bill on Thursday for it to stay alive.

"Solitary confinement is torture," said Hamid Yazdan Panah, advocacy director for Immigrant Defense Advocates, an organization based in Sacramento that supports the bill. "If we a long time ago accepted that torture is unacceptable in our jails and prisons, then we really have to take this issue seriously."

Assembly Bill 2632 would prohibit solitary confinement for pregnant women, those younger than 26, those older than 59, and people with certain disabilities or mental health disorders. The approach, also called punitive segregation, would apply to jails, prisons and detention facilities in the state.

For everyone else, stretches in solitary would be limited to 15 consecutive days and 45 days in any 180-day period. Staff workers would also have to periodically check on the confined person and offer out-of-cell programming for at least four hours a day.

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In California, roughly 4,000 people are in solitary confinement at any given time, and the proposed changes would lead to a 70 percent reduction in that number, said Yazdan Panah.

"We're housing individuals in a cell the size of a parking stall, with no real outlet, with no interaction with other people for extended periods of time," Assemblyman Chris Holden, who introduced the bill, said. "It's just unacceptable."

Holden's bill is modeled after one in New York that went into effect this year after a nearly decade-long legislative battle. Colorado, New Jersey, New Mexico and at least 10 other states have also limited or banned punitive segregation, despite objections from corrections officials who argue that such rollbacks will make prisons and jails less safe.

One former inmate spent more than a decade in solitary confinement, starting when he was 16, he recently wrote in The San Francisco Chronicle. A large body of research links the practice to increased risks for self-harm and suicide, mental health deterioration and higher rates of death after release.

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"I often tell people that I would have preferred a physical beating to being held in isolation," the former inmate, Kevin McCarthy, wrote in the newspaper. "Bruises and cuts heal, but the wounds in my mind and soul are so deep that I do not believe I will ever fully recover."

The bill's biggest sticking point is cost. The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation estimates that the state would have to initially spend more than $1 billion to comply with the law, because of a necessary increase in programming space, exercise yards and staffing.

A separate analysis by the bill's advocates came to a different conclusion — that a reduction in the solitary confinement population would reduce space and staffing needs, and therefore lead to savings for the state of at least $60 million per year.

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The U.C.L.A. campus.Kendrick Brinson for The New York Times

The rest of the news

  • University of California: The public university system's nine campuses accepted a record number of Californians as first-year students for the upcoming year, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Supreme Court: Gov. Gavin Newsom named Patricia Guerrero to replace the outgoing Tani Cantil-Sakauye as chief justice of the California Supreme Court. If confirmed, Guerrero would be the first Latina to serve in that role, The Sacramento Bee reports.
  • Hazardous waste: The hotelier Ritz-Carlton was ordered to pay $535,000 in penalties on Wednesday for the illegal disposal of hazardous waste at eight of its locations in the state, The Los Angeles Times reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Joshua Tree: Roads on the south side of the national park that were closed earlier this week because of flash floods opened on Wednesday, The Associated Press reports.
  • Labor: A bill set for a State Senate committee vote Thursday could give fast food workers in California power to collectively bargain and would create a state-run council to negotiate wages, hours and working conditions, Capital Public Radio reports.
  • Anaheim investigation: The Anaheim City Council voted Tuesday to fund an independent audit of campaign contributions to former Mayor Harry Sidhu and current council members following an F.B.I. corruption probe that became public in May, The LAist reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • L.G.B.T.Q. protections: Paso Robles school leaders were considering removing L.G.B.T.Q.-specific protections from the district's discrimination and harassment policies, but they tabled discussion after community outrage, The Tribune reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Truckee teen: The search continued on Wednesday for Kiely Rodni, 16, who went missing on Saturday from a party at a Sierra campground, The Sacramento Bee reports.
  • Opioid crisis: A federal judge ruled on Wednesday that Walgreens could be held responsible for contributing to San Francisco's opioid crisis by over-dispensing the drug, The Associated Press reports.
  • Boy bosses: Founders of Pinterest, Airbnb and Instacart have resigned from leadership roles at their companies in recent weeks, signifying the end of an era at founder-led companies.
Dane Tashima for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Monica Pierini.

What we're eating

Eggplant Parmesan pasta.

Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Andrew Riley:

"Living in San Francisco for 20 years, my wife and I often needed to escape the noise. Muir Beach in Marin is waaay off the beaten path. It's marshy and quiet. Lots of weather and seals. And the sound of wind. The Pelican Inn is a B&B with a pub and restaurant to ward off the chill with a pint.

Love that place."

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.

Mark Braly walking from the locker room to the pool at the Schaal Aquatic Center at the University of California, Davis.Nicholas Albrecht for The New York Times

And before you go, some good news

At 86, Mark Braly may be the world's oldest water polo player. Braly, who lives in Davis and practices on the U.C. Davis campus, came to the sport only 10 years ago.

"I sometimes make goals, but there is always the suspicion they were the gift of a kind goalie," Braly told The New York Times. "Every player in the region knows my name because they have to shout constant directions."

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

Correction: Yesterday's newsletter said that Kenneth Mejia is running for Los Angeles city attorney. He is running for city controller.

P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Hoppy beers, for short (4 letters).

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

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