Ian nears Category 5; Biden declares war on child hunger

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Sep 28, 2022 View in browser
 
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By Garrett Ross

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Tree limbs and palm fronds, knocked down from wind produced by the outer bands of Hurricane Ian, litter a parking lot of a shopping center, Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2022, in Cooper City, Fla.

Tree limbs and palm fronds litter a parking lot in Cooper City, Fla., on Wednesday, Sept. 28. | Wilfredo Lee/AP Photo

HURRICANE IAN LATEST — Our colleague Andrew Atterbury reports from Tallahassee, Fla. : "With mere hours until the Category 4 hurricane makes landfall, Florida's top officials said that bridges are now closed in some of the areas facing the greatest threat: Collier, Charlotte and Sarasota counties on the west coast. Scores of Floridians evacuated ahead of the massive storm, but for those that didn't, they are now being directed to stay indoors at the risk of facing maximum winds clocking in at 155 miles per hour." (Note: Category 5 status starts at 157 mph.)

Gov. RON DeSANTIS: "If you are in any of those counties, it's no longer possible to safely evacuate. It's time to hunker down and prepare for this storm."

"Don't 'gouge the American people,' Biden warns oil industry as Ian nears," by Ben Lefebvre

YIKES — Per AP: "The Nord Stream pipeline leaks pumping huge volumes of natural gas into the Baltic Sea could emit the equivalent of one third of Denmark's total annual greenhouse gas emissions," the head of the Danish Energy Agency said today.

HUNGER AIMS — President JOE BIDEN rolled out his administration's plan to tackle hunger in America this morning and kicked off the White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health — the first presidential conference on hunger since RICHARD NIXON's in 1969. The centerpiece of the plan is the aim to end hunger in the country by 2030. "This goal is within our reach — just look at how far we've come on child poverty," Biden said. More from WaPo

President Joe Biden speaks during the White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health, at the Ronald Reagan Building, Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2022, in Washington.

Biden speaks during the White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health, at the Ronald Reagan Building on Wednesday, Sept. 28. | Evan Vucci/AP Photo

In an awkward moment, our colleague Meredith Lee Hill reports that Biden appeared to reference the late Rep. JACKIE WALORSKI (R-Ind.), who was a co-chair of the House Hunger Caucus and a leading voice on nutrition issues.

"Jackie, are you here?" Biden said after thanking Rep. JIM McGOVERN (D-Mass.), Sen. CORY BOOKER (D-N.J.) and Sen. MIKE BRAUN (R-Ind.). "Where is Jackie?" Watch the 15-second clip  

LOL — Fox News' @ChadPergram: "On the Senate floor, Dem NM Sen BEN RAY LUJÁN was presiding. When he recognizes [ MITCH] McCONNELL to speak, Lujan refers to him as the 'Majority Leader.' McConnell replies 'Thank you. I haven't given up hope.'"

FUN ONE — "How Lizzo came to play a president's crystal flute on a D.C. stage," by WaPo's Theresa Vargas: "A day before Lizzo's public performance, she spent a private afternoon at the Library of Congress, playing several flutes from its impressive collection."

Good Wednesday afternoon.

 

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BIG PICTURE

DEMOGRAPHIC DATA — "Pa. Republicans are gaining on Democrats in registered voters. We look at what that really means," by the Philly Inquirer's Julia Terruso and Jonathan Lai: "A decade ago, Pennsylvania Democrats outnumbered Republicans by one million registered voters, or about 13 percentage points. This year it's down to 540,000, about six percentage points."

More details: "Republicans have added voters across Pennsylvania, in virtually every county that isn't anchored by or near a large city. Much of the growth is in small or medium-sized counties. Many new Republicans are Democrats and independents who switched parties and have likely already been voting Republican for years. Democrats have far fewer party-switchers coming their way, and are instead pulling in new voters, especially young ones. That long-running trend spiked following the Supreme Court decision over-turning a constitutional right to abortion."

SIREN IN CHICAGO — "Many Black voters in some of Chicago's most violent neighborhoods are frustrated that Democrats haven't curbed persistent crime or fixed the economic problems that underpin it, prompting some to weigh sitting out upcoming elections," WSJ's Joshua Jamerson and Chad Day report . "Republican policies to bolster employment opportunities and law enforcement appeal to some Black voters, though many remain reluctant to back GOP candidates because they disagree with them on other issues and dislike their affiliation with former President Donald Trump."

THIS IS STILL HAPPENING — "Activists Flood Election Offices With Challenges," by NYT's Nick Corasaniti and Alexandra Berzon: "Groups in Georgia have challenged at least 65,000 voter registrations across eight counties, claiming to have evidence that voters' addresses were incorrect. In Michigan, an activist group tried to challenge 22,000 ballots from voters who had requested absentee ballots for the state's August primary. And in Texas, residents sent in 116 affidavits challenging the eligibility of more than 6,000 voters in Harris County, which is home to Houston and is the state's largest county."

BATTLE FOR THE SENATE

MASTERS OF HIS FATE — Arizona GOP Senate nominee BLAKE MASTERS in many ways has softened his hard-right campaign, but it's not quite having the desired effect. "Skepticism from voters in the political center is emerging as a stubborn problem for Mr. Masters as he tries to win what has become an underdog race against Senator Mark Kelly," NYT's Jazmine Ulloa reports from Phoenix. What they're saying: "In nearly a dozen interviews in Phoenix and Tucson, as well as in the purplish Phoenix suburbs of Arcadia, Chandler and Scottsdale, most independent voters expressed views of Mr. Masters as inauthentic, slippery on the issues and not truly dedicated to Arizona."

BATTLE FOR THE HOUSE

JOCO DISPATCH — Kansas Democratic Rep. SHARICE DAVIDS got a tough redraw of her district from Republicans this year, setting her up for a tough reelection fight. But, as has become the theme of this year's elections, the Supreme Court's Dobbs decision leveled the playing field again. "That's why she is spending the final stretch of the campaign focused on abortion, attempting to keep the same abortion-rights supporters who turned out to vote in August energized to do so again in November," AP's John Hanna writes.

BATTLE FOR THE STATES

IN PENNSYLVANIA — "Former President Trump stumps for Doug Mastriano again during telephone rally," by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette's Julian Routh: "Item by item, Mr. Trump hit on some of the biggest themes of the race, framing Mr. Mastriano as a fighter for the 'Make America Great Again' agenda that continues to galvanize the GOP base across the country."

IN OREGON — "Oregon gubernatorial candidates clash over guns, abortion," by Andrew Selsky in Salem, Ore.: "At the debate in Bend, Oregon, [Democrat TINA] KOTEK was alone in saying she would support a gun-control measure that has received enough voter signatures to get on the November ballot. Johnson and Drazan said they oppose it. The measure would require people wanting to purchase a gun to first qualify for a permit and is one of the strictest gun-control measures in the nation."

HOT POLLS

New York: Democratic Gov. KATHY HOCHUL leads GOP Rep. LEE ZELDIN in the gubernatorial race, 54% to 37%, according to a new Siena College poll. And for good measure: Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER is leading Republican JOE PINION, 55% to 36%. More from NYT's Luis Ferré-Sadurní and Nicholas Fandos

HOT ADS

With help from Steve Shepard

Virginia: GOP House candidate JEN KIGGANS' latest ad features a direct-to-camera endorsement from Gov. GLENN YOUNGKIN, who carried Democratic Rep. ELAINE LURIA's Hampton Roads district by a double-digit margin in his election last year.

Iowa: After weeks of blistering Democratic attacks on abortion (which feature him raising his hand at a debate to say he didn't support exceptions to restrictions), GOP House candidate ZACH NUNN is up with a response ad. "Look, good people can disagree on abortion," Nunn says in the ad, calling Democratic Rep. CINDY AXNE's position "too extreme."

 

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TRUMP CARDS

There's a quartet of new excerpts out today from Maggie Haberman's forthcoming book, "Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America" ( $32) — and they're doozies.

WaPo's Josh Dawsey writes that the book offers a peek at the "unusual and erratic interactions between Trump and world leaders, members of Congress and his own aides, along with behind-the-scenes accounts of his time as a businessman." Some examples:

  • "Trump was often crass and profane about world leaders and others in his orbit. He referred to German Prime Minister ANGELA MERKEL as 'that b----,' according to the book. When RUTH BADER GINSBURG was dying in 2020, the book says, Trump would sarcastically raise his hands to the sky in prayer and say: 'Please God. Please watch over her. Every life is precious,' before asking an aide: 'How much longer do you think she has?'"
  • "Trump gave former New York mayor RUDY GIULIANI (R) control of his legal team because his other lawyers were not willing to go far enough to overturn the 2020 election, Haberman writes. 'Okay, Rudy, you're in charge. Go wild, do anything you want. I don't care,' Trump said over the phone, as he pushed him to help overturn the results. 'My lawyers are terrible.' He frequently berated White House counsel PAT CIPOLLONE , according to the book."

"Haberman's New Book Details Trump's Transphobic and Anti-Gay Behavior," by The Daily Beast's Zachary Petrizzo: "[A] week before the second debate unfolded in St. Louis in 2016, Trump's close adviser at the time, REINCE PRIEBUS , presented the aspiring political figure with a question on same-sex bathrooms. In playing the role of a female transgender student, Priebus asked Trump whether this hypothetical student could still use the girl's bathroom. Without missing a beat, Trump said he had a question. 'Cocked or decocked?' Trump asked. Offering up a 'blank stare,' the group was taken aback."

"Trump Saw Staffers of Color at White House, Assumed They Were Waiters, Book Says," by Rolling Stone's Asawin Suebsaeng and Patrick Reis: "It was January of 2017, and a newly inaugurated President Donald Trump held a reception at the White House to meet with top congressional leaders. Hors d'oeuvres were on the menu. And the new president turned to a row of racially diverse Democratic staffers and asked them to retrieve the canapes, according to a new book. 'Why don't you get' the food, Trump told staffers for Sen. CHUCK SCHUMER, Rep. NANCY PELOSI and others."

"Trump nearly fired Jared and Ivanka via tweet," by CNN's Jeremy Herb

 

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CONGRESS

NADLER'S UNHEEDED WARNING — Drawing from another upcoming blockbuster book release, Fox News has new details from "Unchecked: The Untold Story Behind Congress's Botched Impeachments of Donald Trump" ($35), the new book from Playbook's own Rachael Bade and WaPo's Karoun Demirjian.

In late 2019, as House Democrats moved closer to impeaching Trump over his dealings with Ukraine, Judiciary Chair JERRY NADLER (D-N.Y.) warned impeachment leader ADAM SCHIFF (D-Calif.) and Speaker NANCY PELOSI that their proposed strategy was flat-out "unconstitutional." The book includes a scene where Nadler confronts Schiff about their reluctance to allow Trump's legal team to cross-examine witnesses and present their own evidence.

Nadler's concerns echoed GOP attacks at the time — that Democrats were trampling on Trump's constitutional right to due process. But Pelosi and Schiff worried Trump would hijack the proceedings and use them as a platform to go after then-candidate Biden. After the two Californians ignored him, Nadler's aides began calling Schiff's investigative team the "lawless HPSCI bastards" — a reference to the formal name of Schiff's committee, the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.

2023 DREAMING — Forget about the top echelon of House Democratic leadership: The race for caucus vice chair is actually the most competitive, Sarah Ferris and Nicholas Wu report. Reps. JOYCE BEATTY (Ohio), MADELEINE DEAN (Pa.), DEBBIE DINGELL (Mich.) and TED LIEU (Calif.) have ramped up their campaigns of late after laying the groundwork for a while. There's no clear frontrunner yet, and more candidates could yet enter (or depart) the fray.

INCOMING — "Democrats brace for a national security brain drain," by Connor O'Brien: "Democrats on committees with oversight of defense and foreign policy issues are among some of the most vulnerable incumbents … The urgency to retain national security Democrats — many of whom came to Congress in recent years with extensive military, diplomatic or intelligence experience — is compounded by the retirements of senior Democrats, who represent decades of institutional knowledge on military and national security issues."

HEADS UP — "Last Chance for Antitrust Bill to Curb Big Tech Now Hangs on Lame Duck Vote," by Bloomberg's Emily Birnbaum and Anna Edgerton

THE PANDEMIC

MONKEYPOX LATEST — "Unvaccinated individuals 14 times more likely to get monkeypox than vaccinated, new US data shows," by CNN's MJ Lee: "That figure reflects the first wave of authoritative data collected by the Biden administration on the efficacy of the monkeypox vaccine that is currently being administered across the United States. … Multiple health officials said that the vaccines data has the administration feeling increasingly optimistic about the efficacy of the two-dose Jynneos monkeypox vaccine – and the possibility of ultimately eliminating the current outbreak in the U.S. altogether."

 

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AMERICA AND THE WORLD

WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE — The inaugural U.S.-Pacific Island Country Summit kicks off today, a key event to help counter Chinese influence in the Pacific. But two of the countries involved, the Marshall Islands and the Solomon Islands, are prominently defying American efforts to rebuke China and welcome the U.S., Phelim Kine reports . "That public pushback marks a humbling kick-off for the two-day summit and underscores the challenges that the Biden administration faces in redeeming U.S. credibility in a region where China is filling the void created by decades of U.S. disengagement. But the administration is adamant that the two-day summit will deliver tangible benefits."

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

IMMIGRATION FILES — "Migrant encounters at the border are higher today than they were before Gov. Greg Abbott's Operation Lone Star began," by the Texas Tribune's James Barragán: "The number of migrant encounters at the Texas-Mexico border has climbed from 109,456 in March 2021, the month the mission began, to 116,976 in August — a slower rate of growth than at other parts of the border but a failure of Abbott's office's stated desire to "stop this revolving door and deter others considering entering illegally."

PLAYBOOKERS

OUT AND ABOUT — Cornerstone Government Affairs held an event Tuesday night, Salute to Black Congressional and Administration Staff, at their offices in Washington as part of CBC week. SPOTTED: Steven McGann, Glenn Ivey, Kamau Marshall, Lawrence Bell, Gideon Bragin, Nd Ubezonu, Alyssa Mensie, Nicole Varner, Haeyoung Yoon, Josh Davis, Jeffrey Mims, Charles Carithers, Shanetta Paskel, Delora Sanchez Ifekauche, Larry Camm, Deana McRae and Tonya Kinlow.

TRANSITION — Amelia Penniman is now comms lead at Watershed. She previously was director of strategic comms and public affairs at Bully Pulpit Interactive.

WEEKEND WEDDING — Rhonda Craig, senior director at Betty&Smith, married Wesley Williams , a site reliability engineer at BetterCloud, in downtown Atlanta on Sunday. The two met at a friend's wedding — Rhonda, a guest; Wesley, a wedding crasher. Wesley asked Rhonda if she had a "plus one" that night. After Rhonda replied "No" he quipped, "You do now." Pic Another pic

 

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Dissident republican group Lasair Dhearg slammed for ‘intimdating’ letter sent to every Northern Ireland school about PSNI ‘gunmen’

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  Sep 28, 2022  
     
     
  Dissident republicans send letters to every school about 'PSNI gunmen'  
Dissident republicans send letters to every school about 'PSNI gunmen'
     
 
Simon Coveney: Discussions with SoS focused on rebuilding a partnership approach
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California Today: How an underground L.A. skatepark became legal

Channel Street Skatepark in San Pedro is considered one of the nation's only "D.I.Y." skate parks to

By Douglas Morino

It's Wednesday. Channel Street Skatepark in San Pedro is considered one of the nation's only "D.I.Y." skate parks to be officially sanctioned. Plus, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed bills devised to strengthen reproductive rights.

Channel Street Skatepark.Anthony Acosta

LOS ANGELES — With its spray-painted murals and hand-sculpted ramps, Channel Street Skatepark sits under a freeway overpass at this city's southern edge, a concrete mecca attracting skateboarders from across Southern California and beyond.

After being sealed off in red tape for nearly nine years, the underground landmark in the port neighborhood of San Pedro recently reopened, signaling a victory for a group that fought a bureaucratic battle to bring the park back to life.

"Channel Street is more than a world-class skate park, it's a global cultural hub," said April Jones, 40, a skateboarder and filmmaker who is creating a documentary about the venue. "The way they legalized Channel Street has never been done in the history of skateboarding."

During my recent visit, I met skateboarders from across Los Angeles and Orange Counties who had traveled to San Pedro to celebrate Channel Street's rebirth. The sounds of skateboard trucks grinding on metal rails and polyurethane wheels rolling across the blacktop could be heard against the background drone of traffic from the freeway above. A freshly painted mural of a shovel and skateboard towered above one side of the park. On the other stood a blue-tile mosaic depicting cresting ocean waves.

Channel Street is considered one of the nation's only "D.I.Y." (do it yourself) skate parks to become legal, and its story began in October 2002.

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Then, a group of skateboarders who had long sought — and failed — to get city officials to build a skate park in their community embarked on a seemingly simple effort: creating a place to practice their sport in an abandoned parking lot under the Harbor Freeway.

Equipped with shovels and two bags of cement, they went to work.

Constructing Channel Street Skatepark.Andy Harris

A project that began as a pair of concrete bumps grew to include quarter pipes, metal rails and deep bowls. Word of the hand-built skate park spread.

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"We wanted a place to skate out of the sun, where we wouldn't get kicked out," Andy Harris, 49, one of Channel Street's founders, told me during my visit to the park. "But we thought it wouldn't last."

However, Channel Street went undisturbed by the authorities — despite sitting just two blocks away from the Los Angeles Police Department's Harbor Division station.

While the police didn't close the illegal skate park, the California Department of Transportation eventually did. In 2014, crews closed the 8,000-square-foot site to widen the freeway above. The park sat empty and was surrounded by a chain-link fence long after work was finished.

As the group sought to reopen Channel Street, they found themselves entangled in a complex web of regulations. The ensuing struggle brought together a diverse coalition uniting under the rallying cry "Free Channel Street" that included activists and a Los Angeles city councilman, Joe Buscaino, who became a vocal supporter of the group.

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With new skate park plans drawn up by volunteers, the group navigated five city departments — all with their own regulations and approval requirements.

Building and safety permits were issued in 2019. But another hurdle appeared when the skate park's founders learned that a key piece of land owned by the Port of Los Angeles had to be transferred to the City of Los Angeles — a process that took more than a year.

Channel Street Skatepark reopened last month, eight years after it closed in 2014.Veronika Reinhart

Liability insurance was purchased through a grant from Buscaino's office. Donations funded needed repairs and improvements to meet the city's building code.

Publicly funded skate parks sprang up across the city, even in San Pedro. But in a region where skateboarding is deeply rooted, Channel Street is unique, serving as a symbol of individuality and grit, its supporters said.

"Channel Street has a life of its own," Jones, the filmmaker, said. "It was built by skateboarders with their own hands. They sculpted, molded and painted."

(This article is part of the California Today newsletter. Sign up to get it delivered to your inbox.)

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People rallied in support of abortion rights at the State Capitol in Sacramento in May.Rich Pedroncelli/Associated Press

The rest of the news

  • Abortion rights: Gov. Gavin Newsom signed 13 abortion protection and reproductive health bills, codifying key parts of California's campaign to counter the effects of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe vs. Wade, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Pay scale: California employers will soon have to include a pay scale in their job postings under a new law Newsom signed, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
  • Unsung journalist: Why have we never heard of Elsie Robinson, a California native whose columns were read by 20 million people for decades? A new book seeks to find out.
  • Stealing: A federal indictment accuses a California woman of stealing more than $1 million from her employer while working for a Minnesota property management company, The Associated Press reports.
  • Standardized test results: The California Department of Education will release the results of last spring's statewide math, reading and science tests in October, LAist reports.
  • Student debt: A libertarian group in California filed a legal challenge to President Biden's plan for student debt cancellation, calling it an illegal overreach that would increase state tax burdens, The Associated Press reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Redistricting: Newsom removed Fresno County supervisors' power to draw election lines, The Fresno Bee reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Police psych tests: The Alameda County Sheriff's Office has stripped 47 deputies of their guns and arrest powers because they failed psychological exams, The Associated Press reports.
Sang An for The New York Times.

What we're eating

The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park in San Diego.John Francis Peters for The New York Times

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Fiona Everett, who recommends a night at the Rady Shell amphitheater in downtown San Diego:

"On the water, the summer home of the San Diego Symphony. They play with a variety of musicians of many music genres. It is magical! Sunset on the harbor, live music, a glass of wine … fantastic!"

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.

Tell us

It's officially fall. What do you love about the season in California? What are the best ways to enjoy fall in your corner of the state?

Email us at CAtoday@nytimes.com with your stories, memories and recommendations.

Tom Moore in full flight practicing a trick at the Santa Barbara Trapeze Co.Nicholas Albrecht for The New York Times

And before you go, some good news

Tom Moore made a name for himself as a film, TV and theater director whose credits include the original Broadway production of "Grease" and the Pulitzer Prize-winning play "'Night, Mother."

But his dream has always been to "fly" on the trapeze, high in the air. And that's what he's doing at age 79.

Thanks for reading. We'll be back tomorrow.

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

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