Biden sets a meeting with Xi

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Nov 10, 2022 View in browser
 
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By Garrett Ross

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THE LATEST CALLED RACES — Democrat ERIC SORENSEN defeats Republican ESTHER JOY KING in Illinois' 17th District, which was vacated by retiring Democratic Rep. CHERI BUSTOS … Republican Rep. JAY OBERNOLTE wins reelection over Democrat DEREK MARSHALL in California's 23rd District … Democrat GABRIEL VASQUEZ defeats Republican Rep. YVETTE HERRELL to flip New Mexico's 2nd District … Republican RYAN ZINKE defeats Democrat MONICA TRANEL in Montana's 1st District … The latest House results The latest Senate results

Joe Biden speaks at a podium.

President Joe Biden will meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping next week. | Alex Brandon/AP Photo

PRESIDENTIAL PROGRAMMING NOTE — President JOE BIDEN will meet with Chinese President XI JINPING on Monday in Bali, Indonesia, the White House announced today. In a statement, press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE said that the leaders "will discuss efforts to maintain and deepen lines of communication between the United States and the PRC, responsibly manage competition, and work together where our interests align, especially on transnational challenges that affect the international community." This is Biden and Xi's first in-person meeting since Biden took office. More from AP's Aamer Madhani and Zeke Miller

MARK YOUR CALENDARS — House Democrats have officially set their leadership elections for Nov. 30. More from Punchbowl's Heather Caygle

Speaking of This morning, Rep. DEBBIE DINGELL (D-Mich.) announced a bid for vice chair of the House Democratic Caucus. Read her letter

INFLATION NATION — "U.S. Inflation Slows More Than Forecast, Gives Fed Downshift Room," by Bloomberg's Reade Pickert: "U.S. inflation cooled in October by more than forecast, offering hope that the fastest price increases in decades are ebbing and giving Federal Reserve officials room to slow down their steep interest-rate hikes."

The nitty gritty: The consumer price index was up 7.7% from a year earlier, the smallest annual advance since the start of the year and down from 8.2% in September, according to a Labor Department report Thursday. Core prices, which exclude food and energy and are regarded as a better underlying indicator of inflation, advanced 6.3%, pulling back from a 40-year high. The core consumer price index increased 0.3% from the prior month, while the overall CPI advanced 0.4%. Both increases as well as the monthly rises were below the median economist estimates."

What comes next: "Two Fed officials Thursday argued for moderating the pace of rate increases. PATRICK HARKER, who heads up the Philadelphia Fed, said that he expects the central bank to 'slow the pace of our rate hikes as we approach a sufficiently restrictive stance.' At a separate event, Dallas Fed President LORIE LOGAN said the CPI report was 'a welcome relief, but there is still a long way to go.'"

Good Thursday afternoon. AP's VoteCast surveyed Tennessee voters about their opinions on TAYLOR SWIFT, with about 4 in 10 viewing her favorably, while "3 in 10 felt they are never, ever getting back together with the songstress." Talk about an Anti-Hero, am I right? My favorability rating for "Midnights" is 13/13. Let me know yours: gross@politico.com .

 

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MORE MIDTERMS FALLOUT

RUNOFF REPORT — "Walker hauls in $3.3 million on first day of new campaign," by Fox News' Paul Steinhauser: "[HERSCHEL] WALKER, who finished roughly 35,000 votes behind Warnock out of nearly 4 million votes cast in the Senate election in the battleground state of Georgia, is returning to the campaign trail Thursday, teaming up with conservative Sen. TED CRUZ at a rally in Canton, a small city about 40 miles north of Atlanta. Walker's campaign tells Fox News that it plans to be back up on television with an ad later this week."

HOW IT PLAYED — NYT's Lisa Lerer and Elizabeth Dias are up with a big look at how Democrats across the country leaned into the abortion issue ahead of the midterms and how it paid off in the end. The results also "signal the struggle ahead for Republicans," they write, "who leave this election divided on an issue that has long been a bedrock for the party. The socially conservative wing of the party remains determined to advance their cause, but they now face a Republican establishment more inclined to see debates over abortion restrictions as a political liability."

Interesting nugget: "Exit polls conducted by the television networks and Edison Research showed that in Pennsylvania abortion overtook the economy as the top issue on voters' minds, and in Michigan, nearly half of all voters said abortion was their top issue."

DEEP IN THE HEART — Despite better-than-expected results for Democrats across the country, the blue boost did not carry over into Texas. In the Lonestar State, it was mostly business as usual for Republicans, punctuated by a convincing defeat for BETO O'ROURKE in the gubernatorial race by the hands of GOP Gov. GREG ABBOTT — the latest in a string of campaign closures for O'Rourke. Now Dems in the state are wondering where to turn next.

"His defeat on Tuesday instead underscored just how dominant the Republican Party remains in Texas, with control of the State Legislature and every statewide office, and was likely to force a reckoning for Democrats, who do not have a clear path forward or successor to assume Mr. O'Rourke's mantle," NYT's J. David Goodman writes in Dallas .

RED (YOUNGKIN'S VERSION) — Despite all of the travel that Virginia Gov. GLENN YOUNGKIN embarked on in an effort to boost Republican candidates across the country, WaPo's Gregory Schneider and Laura Vozzella write that Youngkin's signature red vest is not as powerful of a symbol as Trump's traditional red hat — at least not yet.

"Of the 15 states where Youngkin traveled to stump for GOP candidates , four saw clear Republican victories. Three of those were already bright red — Nebraska, Oklahoma and South Dakota — while the fourth was Georgia, where Gov. Brian Kemp led all summer. Eight — Colorado, Connecticut, Kansas, Maine, Michigan, New Mexico, New York and Wisconsin — were losses for Republicans. And the remaining three — Arizona, Nevada and Oregon — are close contests in which Democratic candidates are within reach of victory."

HOW FAR WILL THEIR STARS RISE? — Democratic Gov. GRETCHEN WHITMER's convincing reelection in Michigan has put her "among a handful of fellow Democrats who, after the midterms, are being mentioned as potential national party stars," WaPo's Ashley Parker writes , noting that Massachusetts' MAURA HEALEY, Maryland's WES MOORE and Pennsylvania's JOSH SHAPIRO are also generating buzz. "But the specifics of Whitmer's victory — she's a woman who triumphed over a Make America Great Again candidate in a Midwestern battleground state, all while sweeping in Democratic candidates down the ballot — help particularly fortify her profile as one of the party's future leaders."

BY THE NUMBERS — "After big early vote, overall Georgia turnout misses expectations," by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution's Mark Niesse

 

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AMERICA AND THE WORLD

PUTIN SKIPS G-20 — Russian President VLADIMIR PUTIN will not attend the scheduled G-20 summit next week, according to Russian news agencies, who wrote that Foreign Minister SERGEY LAVROV will represent the country. "For weeks, the Kremlin had been evasive about Mr. Putin's plans to attend the summit in person. Analysts said that Moscow was watching to see whether the situation on the front lines in Ukraine could allow Mr. Putin to speak from the position of strength," NYT's Ivan Nechepurenko writes .

AT THE CLIMATE CONFAB — "Biden's Message on Climate Might Not Be the One the World Wants," by NYT's Lisa Friedman in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt: "Instead of being hailed as a president who passed a landmark climate law, Mr. Biden will join a gathering where developing nations have spent all week excoriating the United States and other industrialized nations for causing climate change and demanding reparations — a call that some European leaders have begun to answer with monetary pledges, squeezing Mr. Biden to do the same."

Related reads: "Biden Brings 'Trust Us' Message to Skeptical UN Climate Summit," by Bloomberg's Jennifer Dlouhy and Will Kennedy … "Biden pushes to require big federal contractors to cut climate pollution," by WaPo's Maxine Joselow

MUSK READS

INSIDE MUSK'S TWITTER … There is a torrent of news streaming out of Twitter HQ today, as ELON MUSK continues to put his stamp on the social media giant and users and employees adjust to the new regime. Here's a roundup of the notable developments so far today:

EXODUS MACHINA — "Top privacy executives quit Twitter, raising questions about data security," by WaPo's Joseph Menn, Cat Zakrzewski, Faiz Siddiqui and Nitasha Tiku: "The Federal Trade Commission, which reached its latest consent decree with Twitter in May, said it was 'tracking the developments at Twitter with deep concern.' 'No CEO or company is above the law, and companies must follow our consent decrees,' said Douglas Farrar, the FTC's director of public affairs. 'Our revised consent order gives us new tools to ensure compliance, and we are prepared to use them.'"

CAUTION TO THE WIND — "Elon Musk is putting Twitter at risk of billions in fines, warns company lawyer," by The Verge's Alex Heath: "In a note posted to Twitter's Slack and viewable to all staff that was obtained by The Verge, an attorney on the company's privacy team wrote: 'Elon has shown that his only priority with Twitter users is how to monetize them. I do not believe he cares about the human rights activists. the dissidents, our users in un-monetizable regions, and all the other users who have made Twitter the global town square you have all spent so long building, and we all love.' …

"The note goes on to say that its author, who The Verge knows the identity of but is choosing not to disclose, has 'heard ALEX SPIRO (current head of Legal) say that Elon is willing to take on a huge amount of risk in relation to this company and its users, because "Elon puts rockets into space, he's not afraid of the FTC."'"

WORD OF WARNING — "'Economic Picture Ahead Is Dire,' Elon Musk Tells Twitter Employees," by NYT's Kate Conger and Ryan Mac in San Francisco: "Two weeks after closing a $44 billion deal to buy Twitter, Elon Musk sent emails to the employees of the social media company late on Wednesday, his first communications with them after mass layoffs and high-pressure drives to create new products.

"In two emails seen by The New York Times, Mr. Musk painted a bleak financial picture for Twitter and outlined changes at the company, including an end to its remote work policy and a renewed focus on generating revenue and fighting spam.

"'Sorry that this is my first email to the company, but there is no way to sugarcoat the message,' Mr. Musk, 51, wrote in one email. 'The economic picture ahead is dire.' Twitter was too heavily dependent on advertising and vulnerable to pullbacks in brand spending, he added, and would need to bolster the revenue it gets from subscriptions. In another note to employees, he wrote that 'the absolute top priority is finding and suspending any verified bots/trolls/spam.'"

Musk, in his emails to staff, also told employees that he was banning remote work unless it was personally approved by him, Bloomberg's Kurt Wagner reports .

WHO'S IN CHARGE — "Musk Starts Assembling New Cadre of Leaders Inside Twitter," by Bloomberg's Kurt Wagner: "The company started reshuffling teams this week following a massive round of job cuts that eliminated roughly half of its 7,000-plus workers on Nov. 4. Among managers who remained after the dust settled, a few have begun to emerge as stewards of some of Twitter's most important internal divisions as Musk seeks to rapidly overhaul the struggling business. The rise of new leadership under Musk has provided at least a glimmer of internal stability after a two-week stretch of chaos." But, but, but: "Musk seems to be quickly making most decisions himself, and his Twitter feed remains the central megaphone for communicating them."

— And here's some background on one of those names: "Twitter's Moderation Boss Is an Unlikely Ally of Elon Musk," by WSJ's Sarah Needleman and Robert McMillan: "YOEL ROTH, Twitter's global head of safety and security, was maligned by critics a couple of years ago as the embodiment of the company's alleged bias against conservative users, an issue Mr. Musk has vowed to address. Yet in the chaotic period since Mr. Musk took over Twitter, the billionaire has publicly defended Mr. Roth and positioned him to be a key player in plans to overhaul how the social-media platform moderates content."

CHAOS ON THE TIMELINE — "Fake account chaos engulfs Musk's Twitter," by Rebecca Kern and Alfred Ng

USEFUL TOOL — "This Chrome extension tells you who paid for Twitter's blue checkmark," by The Verge's Tom Warren: "You'll see an 'actually verified' label on original verified accounts, and a 'paid for verification' with a blue dollar sign for Twitter Blue accounts."

SUBSTACK TROLLS — "Introducing the Substack Bestseller badge : A Bestseller badge sits alongside a writer's byline and is displayed on their Substack profile, ranking them in one of three categories according to how many paid subscribers they have. Paying readers, not Substack, decide who gets a badge. We don't give out these badges for subjective reasons and they can't be bought."

 

LISTEN TO POLITICO'S ENERGY PODCAST: Check out our daily five-minute brief on the latest energy and environmental politics and policy news. Don't miss out on the must-know stories, candid insights, and analysis from POLITICO's energy team. Listen today .

 
 

TRUMP CARDS

AT THE TRUMP ORG TRIAL — "Trump Knew of Alleged Tax Dodge, Trial Testimony Suggests," by Bloomberg's Greg Farrell and Zijia Song: "Controller JEFFREY MCCONNEY was asked by a prosecutor at the criminal tax fraud trial of two of the firm's business units on Thursday whether longtime chief financial officer ALLEN WEISSELBERG had spoken with the former president about reducing Weisselberg's salary -- and giving him perks instead -- to lower his tax liability. 'That's what Allen told me, yes,' McConney said."

THE PANDEMIC

MUCK READ — "Who killed the Covid-19 vaccine waiver?" by Ashleigh Furlong, Sarah Anne Aarup and Samuel Horti in London: "The inside story of how lobbying, threats and the desire to protect industry gutted a proposal that was meant to make vaccines widely available in poorer countries."

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

GONE WITH THE WIND — "Nicole weakens to tropical storm after making landfall in Florida," by Arek Sarkissian and Bruce Ritchie in Tallahassee

PLAYBOOKERS

STAFFING UP — Elena Crespo is now policy adviser for civilian protection and detainee affairs in the Defense Department's office for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict. She previously was special assistant to the undersecretary of Defense for policy.

 

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California Today: Historic win for women

Women competed in 65 state legislative races, and had already won or were leading in 44 of them as of Wednesday night.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Thursday. More women are expected to be elected to the California Legislature than ever before. Plus, fallout from major layoffs at Meta.

The lights of the State Capitol glowing into the night in Sacramento.Rich Pedroncelli/Associated Press

The first women in the California State Legislature were elected in 1918, before most American women had gained the ability to vote. Here in the Golden State, women got the right to vote in 1911, making California one of the earliest states to adopt that change.

Of the historic November 1918 election, The Associated Press wrote at the time: "California is perfectly willing that her daughters should vote, but she is somewhat dubious about the advisability of putting them in office, as was shown by Tuesday's election, in which only four out of 12 women candidates were elected. These four all were Republicans, and all were elected to the Assembly."

And, seemingly added as an afterthought: "Also, they were the first women ever sent to the California Legislature."

Despite these early gains, California has since fallen behind many states in electing women to office. Before Tuesday's election, 32.5 percent of our legislative members were women, a smaller fraction than in 22 other states, according to data from the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University. By contrast, in nearby Oregon, Arizona and New Mexico, women account for 43 percent of state legislators in each state, while they comprise 59 percent in Nevada, the data show.

But the number of women holding California's elected offices is likely to shoot up. Women competed in 65 Assembly and Senate races on Tuesday, and had already won or were leading in 44 of them as of Wednesday night, according to election returns. Another six women already serving as state legislators were not up for re-election this year and will continue in their positions, meaning that a total of 50 women could be in the State Legislature next year.

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Anything more than 39 women, the current figure, would be record-breaking for California, said Susannah Delano, executive director of Close the Gap California, a campaign to achieve gender balance in the California Legislature by 2028. Gender parity in the California Legislature, where there are 40 seats in the Senate and 80 in the Assembly, would require 60 women in office. "It's looking a lot more real," Delano told me on Wednesday.

The current share of women in the California Legislature is similar to that of the U.S. Congress (28 percent), but Delano said that it's "counterintuitive" that progressive California's share isn't higher. She speculated that the high cost of mounting a campaign in the state, driven in part by the size of the population, may compound the hurdles here for women trying to break through.

"To be perfectly honest, there's no good answer," she said. "We should be doing better."

This year, an unusually large number of state legislative seats in California were open, with incumbents who sought other offices instead or who chose not to run for re-election. That gave new candidates more opportunity than usual to jump into the fray. Though Delano's group exclusively supports progressive candidates, several Republican women were on Tuesday's ballot as well, and in a number of high-profile state legislative races, both of the candidates were women.

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And though the Los Angeles mayor's race is currently too close to call — and will probably stay that way for days, if not weeks — if longtime Representative Karen Bass wins, she would be the first woman to serve as mayor of Los Angeles, America's second biggest city. (California has never had a female governor.)

Voters nationwide elected candidates and backed ballot measures on Tuesday in support of abortion rights. While the issue has long rallied Republicans, Democrats seized on it in the midterms in ways they had not before, my colleagues Lisa Lerer and Elizabeth Dias reported.

Voters in California, Vermont and Michigan amended their constitutions to include reproductive rights. In Kentucky, a conservative bastion where abortion is currently banned, voters rejected an amendment that would have declared that their constitution gave no right to an abortion.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, who won re-election on Tuesday, said it was "a point of pride" that abortion was now protected in the California Constitution.

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"It's a point of principle and it's a point of contrast," he said, "at a time of such mixed results all across this country."

Erika James, 27, who lives in Berkeley, said she felt heartened that so many states had voted in favor of abortion access. James, who works in health care, said she voted in almost every election, but wasn't always confident that voting is the answer.

"But in this election, so many people voted to keep abortion rights or to not ban abortion, that it gave me a little more faith in the process," she said.

Holly Secon contributed reporting.

For more on the election:

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The Sonoran Desert toad is primarily found in the Sonoran Desert in parts of the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico.Adam Riding for The New York Times

The rest of the news

  • Sonoran Desert toad: The National Park Service has warned Californians to not lick the Sonoran Desert toad, which lives in parts of Imperial and Riverside Counties, and is known for secreting a psychedelic chemical but has toxins that could make people severely sick, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Investigation: The Los Angeles County district attorney's office has opened a criminal investigation into whether Sheriff Alex Villanueva violated state law when he solicited campaign donations from deputies, The Los Angeles Times reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Former army base: Federal health officials are conducting a study to determine whether veterans stationed at a now-shuttered central California military base were exposed to dangerously high levels of cancer-causing toxins, The Associated Press reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Meta: The parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp reduced its work force by 13 percent — laying off more than 11,000 people — and extended a hiring freeze through the first quarter of next year.Plus, tech companies, including Meta and Twitter, created more workplace transparency, but are now seeing their own tools used to critique them.
  • Alleged stalker: On the last day of a preliminary hearing, the lawyer for an alleged serial stalker in San Francisco said his client's actions were because of mental illness, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
Michael Kraus for The New York Times

What we're eating

Mendocino Coast Botanical GardensLucille Lawrence for The New York Times

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Tim Gage, who recommends the Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens near Fort Bragg.

"We used to visit the Gardens every year on our wedding anniversary and moved to Fort Bragg several years ago. The Gardens' mild maritime climate makes it a garden for all seasons, attracting gardeners and nature lovers. With manicured gardens, a dense coastal pine forest, native flora and habitats, fern-covered canyons, camellias, rhododendrons, magnolias and conifers, heaths and heathers and flower-filled coastal bluffs overlooking the Pacific, the garden is a jewel on the Northern California coast."

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.

What we're recommending

Two books for young readers shine a light on the experiences of Japanese Americans in California during World War II.

Tell us

Have you visited any of the travel destinations that we've recommended in the newsletter? Send us a few lines about your trip, and a photo!

We'd like to share them in upcoming editions of the newsletter. Email us at CAToday@nytimes.com. Please include your name and the city in which you live.

Myra Melford outside of Thayer Hall at the Colburn School of Music in Los Angeles.Magdalena Wosinska for The New York Times

And before you go, some good news

If you were to draft up a list of today's most inventive and respected players in improvised music (or creative music or free jazz), you'd inevitably name the players in the pianist Myra Melford's Fire and Water Quintet.

"It's wonderful to play with them," Melford, 65, said in late October in a video interview from her home in the Bay Area, where she is a music professor at U.C. Berkeley. "Each is such an important individual voice, and I love to hear what discoveries they make."

Melford's respect and admiration for her bandmates is mutual. If it weren't, crucial elements of improvised music would prove impossible.

Thanks for reading. We'll be off tomorrow, but will be back in your inbox on Monday. Enjoy your weekend. — Soumya

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

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