Trump tromps through new GOP poll

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Jul 31, 2023 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Garrett Ross

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WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA - JULY 15: Former US President Donald Trump speaks at the Turning Point Action conference as he continues his 2024 presidential campaign on July 15, 2023 in West Palm Beach, Florida. Trump spoke at the event held in the Palm Beach County Convention Center.

Donald Trump holds a commanding lead in a new poll of GOP primary voters, all while the Georgia investigation into his efforts to influence the 2020 election intensifies. | Joe Raedle/Getty Images

It’s another day of dueling realities for DONALD TRUMP.

As the Georgia investigation into the former president’s efforts to subvert the 2020 election intensifies, a new poll showcases Trump’s teflon tendencies among the GOP electorate.

IN GEORGIA — Fulton County Superior Court Judge ROBERT McBURNEY said this morning that it’s too soon for Trump or his allies to seek to prohibit Georgia prosecutors from continuing to investigate him — in large part because he hasn’t been indicted yet, Kyle Cheney writes.

From McBurney’s ruling: “[F]or some, being the subject of a criminal investigation can, a la Rumpelstiltskin, be turned into golden political capital, making it seem more providential than problematic.”

Meanwhile, Atlanta is bracing for indictments.

  • Security measures are going up around the Fulton County Courthouse downtown, “the most visible sign yet of the looming charging decision in a case that has ensnared not only Trump but several high-profile Republicans who could either face charges or stand witness in a potential trial unlike anything seen before in this Southern metropolis,” WaPo’s Holly Bailey writes from Atlanta.
  • The attention will now turn to a pair of grand jury panels, which will hand down any decision. While it’s not known which one is handling the Trump case at this point, one of the juries meets on Mondays and Tuesdays, with the other convening on Thursdays and Fridays.
  • And just for the record, Fulton County DA FANI WILLIS says there is no connection between her inquiry and the DOJ investigation led by special counsel JACK SMITH. “I don’t know what Jack Smith is doing and Jack Smith doesn’t know what I’m doing,” she told WABE’s Sam Gringlas in an interview. “In all honesty, if Jack Smith was standing next to me, I’m not sure I would know who he was. My guess is he probably can’t pronounce my name correctly.”

POLL POSITION — It’s evident that Trump is the frontrunner in the Republican presidential field. But just how commanding is his lead? A new NYT/Siena College poll of likely Republican primary voters offers the latest answer.

  • The topline: Trump leads Florida Gov. RON DeSANTIS 54% to 17%, a staggering 37-point margin. No other Republican candidate tops 3%.
  • The context: “In the half century of modern presidential primaries, no candidate who led his or her nearest rival by at least 20 points at this stage has ever lost a party nomination,” NYT’s Nate Cohn writes.
  • DeSantis’ uphill battle: “DeSantis holds just 32 percent of voters who aren’t considering Mr. Trump, with the likes of CHRIS CHRISTIE, TIM SCOTT, MIKE PENCE, NIKKI HALEY and VIVEK RAMASWAMY each attracting between 5 percent and 10 percent of the vote. Among the ‘Never Trump’ group of voters who don’t support Mr. Trump against President Biden in a hypothetical general election rematch, Mr. DeSantis only narrowly leads Mr. Christie, 16 percent to 13 percent.”
  • But what if DeSantis clears the field and faces Trump one-on-one? The prospects are still dim: “Yet even if all those candidates disappeared and Mr. DeSantis got a hypothetical one-on-one race against Mr. Trump, he would still lose by a two-to-one margin, 62 percent to 31 percent, the poll found.” See the full poll

Good Monday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. Drop me a line: gross@politico.com.

 

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2024 WATCH

DeSANTIS DOWNLOAD — One of the big questions going into today was what exactly is going on inside Never Back Down, the DeSantis’ super PAC? The answer: Never Back Down “raked in donations of $1 million or more from at least seven wealthy Republican benefactors or their companies, according to internal documents from the group, and had nearly $97 million in cash-on-hand at the end of June,” WaPo’s Michael Scherer and Maeve Reston report, a steep figure that has given the organization a leg up in building out a campaign operation that dwarfs many of his fellow challengers.

Who’s behind him: “The super PAC’s fundraising haul includes millions from former supporters of Donald Trump who publicly cut ties after the 2021 U.S. Capitol riots, including Nevada hotel magnate ROBERT BIGELOW, who gave more than $20 million, and Silicon Valley investor DOUGLAS M. LEONE, who gave $2 million. The two biggest donors in Republican politics during the 2022 midterm cycle, packaging magnates RICHARD and ELIZABETH UIHLEIN, also gave $1 million each.”

Related read: “DeSantis unveils economic plan, aim to ease process for discharging student loans through bankruptcy,” by Kierra Frazier

MORE ON THE FILINGS — The DeSantis super PAC disclosure to WaPo came ahead of today’s FEC deadline for political action committees to file financial reports covering the beginning of the year through June 30. Our colleagues Madison Fernandez and Jessica Piper break down the other big things to watch in the filings.

1. Trump is raising a lot, but he may also be spending a lot
2. More clues into JOE BIDEN’s light-touch campaign
3. Super PACs supporting second-tier candidates could play a big role
4. ActBlue and WinRed filings will show just how stark the small-dollar drop has been

SOMETIMES THE HEADLINE SAYS IT ALL — “RFK Jr. says he’s not anti-vaccine. His record shows the opposite. It’s one of many inconsistencies,” by AP’s Michelle Smith and Ali Swenson

MORE POLITICS

SUCCESSOR SET-UP — Georgia GOP AG CHRIS CARR is telling a “growing number of Republican activists and elected officials that he will run for governor in 2026 to succeed incumbent BRIAN KEMP, a close political ally who can’t run for a third term,” The Atlanta Journal Constitution’s Greg Bluestein reports.

TARGET LIST — The Democratic Attorneys General Association is making it a mission to pick up at least one of three red-state seats in Kentucky, Mississippi and Louisiana in 2023, according to a new memo seen by The New Republic’s Grace Segers. According to an internal memo circulated by DAGA, the Dems argue that they have an upperhand on public safety, “contending that GOP candidates and incumbents are ‘more focused on advancing Washington Republicans’ extremist agenda than keeping their constituents safe.’” The memo also highlights abortion as an area where Dems can hit back at Republicans in these states.

 

ATTENTION PLAYBOOKERS! You need to keep up with the latest political news and nuggets, so here’s a juicy tip: You need to add California Playbook to your daily reading. We have a new team at the helm who are eager to take you inside the political arena in California, from Sacramento and Los Angeles to Silicon Valley and throughout the Golden State! Get the latest exclusive news and buzzy scoops from the fourth largest economy in the world sent straight to your inbox. SUBSCRIBE TODAY.

 
 

TRUMP CARDS

DAY IN COURT — “New defendant in Trump documents case makes first court appearance but still needs a Florida attorney,” by Kimberly Leonard in Miami: “Mar-a-Lago property manager CARLOS DE OLIVEIRA only heard the charges against him and received pre-trial orders, including turning over his expired passport, after his Washington, D.C.-based attorney JOHN IRVING told the court that his client couldn’t find an attorney authorized to practice in the South Florida district, and requested an extension. Magistrate judge EDWIN TORRES granted the extension to August 10.”

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

FOR YOUR RADAR — Ukrainian President VOLODYMYR ZELENSKYY is “likely” to attend the U.N. General Assembly set for September in New York City, “where he is expected to make the case for his ‘peace formula’ plan,” Bloomberg’s Alberto Nardelli and Jennifer Jacobs report. The “10-point blueprint for ending the conflict calls for Russian troops to withdraw completely from Ukraine, release all prisoners of war and deportees, and ensure food and energy security. It also includes security guarantees for Ukraine once the fighting ends and aims to restore safety around the occupied nuclear power plant in Zaporizhzhia, which he says is at risk from Russian sabotage.”

SCOTUS WATCH

THE REAL-WORLD IMPACT — “College Applicants Ask: Can I Mention My Race, or Not?” by WSJ’s Melissa Korn: “Colleges are scrambling this summer to respond to a Supreme Court ruling that sharply curtails how they can consider an applicant’s race in admission decisions. That leaves rising high-school seniors eyeing the most selective schools in uncharted territory, making an already fraught process far more stressful. Most college applications go live on Aug. 1.”

 

HITTING YOUR INBOX AUGUST 14—CALIFORNIA CLIMATE: Climate change isn’t just about the weather. It's also about how we do business and create new policies, especially in California. So we have something cool for you: A brand-new California Climate newsletter. It's not just climate or science chat, it's your daily cheat sheet to understanding how the legislative landscape around climate change is shaking up industries across the Golden State. Cut through the jargon and get the latest developments in California as lawmakers and industry leaders adapt to the changing climate. Subscribe now to California Climate to keep up with the changes.

 
 

POLICY CORNER

THE 411 ON 702 — “Intelligence Board Recommends Curbing F.B.I.’s Power to Use Surveillance Program,” by NYT’s Charlie Savage: “The panel, known as the President’s Intelligence Advisory Board, suggested barring the bureau from searching a database of intercepted information when looking for evidence about Americans in criminal investigations that do not involve foreign intelligence. Under the proposal, however, the F.B.I. could still conduct such searches in investigations related to national security.”

SPY VS. SPY — “Who Paid for a Mysterious Spy Tool? The F.B.I., an F.B.I. Inquiry Found,” by NYT’s Mark Mazzetti, Ronen Bergman and Adam Goldman: “Why did the F.B.I. hire this contractor — which the bureau had previously authorized to purchase a different NSO tool under a cover name — for sensitive information-gathering operations outside the United States? And why was there apparently so little oversight?”

MILITARY MALAISE — “Americans’ confidence in the U.S. military lowest in 2 decades, poll finds,” by Christine Mui: “Only 60 percent of Americans expressed “a great deal” or “quite a lot” of confidence in the military in a recent Gallup poll conducted from June 1 to 22. That’s down from 64 percent who said the same last year.”

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

CLIMATE CONUNDRUM — “Heat Is Costing the U.S. Economy Billions in Lost Productivity,” by NYT’s Coral Davenport: “Extreme heat is regularly affecting workers beyond expected industries like agriculture and construction. Sizzling temperatures are causing problems for those who work in factories, warehouses and restaurants and also for employees of airlines and telecommunications firms, delivery services and energy companies.”

PLAYBOOKERS

MEDIA MOVE — Daniel Strauss is joining CNN as a national politics reporter. He previously was a staff writer and senior political correspondent for The New Republic.

TRANSITIONS — Koren Wong-Ervin is joining Jones Day as a partner in the antitrust and competition law practice. She previously was a partner at Axinn, Veltrop & Harkrider. … Jeffrey Cottle is now a partner at Eversheds Sutherland. He previously was a partner at Brown Rudnick.

ENGAGED — Brendan Shanahan, lieutenant JG in the Navy, and Macaulay Porter, press secretary for Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin got engaged on Saturday at Castle Inn Lighthouse in Newport, R. I. The couple met through friends in 2015. Pic

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Jeff Bechdel, managing director at FTI Consulting, and Riley Bechdel, partner at Forbes Tate Partners, welcomed Harry Steedman Bechdel on Tuesday. Pic

BONUS BIRTHDAY: Alana Peisner of Rep. Mike Levin’s (D-Calif.) office

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California Today: How the Bay Area became a mecca of Burmese cuisine

Not so long ago, Burmese food was rare in California. Now dozens of restaurants across San Francisco are cooking samusa soup, mohinga and other favorites.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Monday. How the Bay Area became a mecca of Burmese cuisine. Plus, understanding the allure of Montecito.

Mandalay opened in 1984 in the Inner Richmond neighborhood of San Francisco, an Asian American enclave sometimes called the city's second Chinatown.Jim Wilson/The New York Times

The line to be seated at Mandalay, a decades-old Burmese restaurant in San Francisco, spilled onto the sidewalk on a recent Saturday evening. Inside the festive dining room, customers huddled around rainbow-colored tea leaf salads, spicy noodle soups and flaky parathas served with coconut dip.

A five-minute walk away, more would-be diners waited in the evening chill for a table at Burma Superstar, another popular restaurant serving a long menu of dishes from Myanmar, formerly known as Burma.

More than 10 eateries in the city specialize in Burmese food, at least by my count. In the larger Bay Area, there are dozens.

I was surprised to discover this. I recently moved to San Francisco from Los Angeles, where I almost never encountered Burmese food. The cuisine is a standby of the Bay Area's culinary scene, with dishes like samusa soup and mohinga, a catfish stew, integrated into the region's gastronomic vernacular.

So I was curious: How did this happen?

Mandalay's tea leaf salad.Jim Wilson/The New York Times
And the restaurant's prawns.Jim Wilson/The New York Times

The legacy traces back at least 40 years, to Nan Yang, which opened in Oakland's Chinatown in 1983. The restaurant, which closed in 2013, may have been the first full-fledged Burmese spot on the West Coast, The San Francisco Chronicle has reported.

Mandalay set up shop six months later, in the summer of 1984, on a quiet stretch of California Street in the Inner Richmond neighborhood of San Francisco, an Asian American neighborhood sometimes called the city's second Chinatown.

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"They wanted to introduce Burmese food to America," Kevin Chen said of his family members who opened Mandalay. Chen took over the establishment, now the longest-operating Burmese restaurant in the Bay Area, from his uncle in 2003. "They started with a lot of difficulty — Americans didn't know what Burmese food was."

A wave of Burmese immigrants came to the United States after a 1962 military takeover of Burma's government, and then again after a national uprising in 1988. By 1990, nearly two-thirds of U.S. immigrants from Myanmar lived in California, Jeanne Batalova, a senior policy analyst at the Migration Policy Institute, said.

Opening restaurants allows new immigrants to make a living, champion the food of their home country and create jobs for others from their community, she said. "It's a very typical thing that immigrants often do," she told me.

Sipping a cup of jasmine tea under purple and green parasols hung from the ceiling of his restaurant's dining room, Chen told me that Burmese food was something of an amalgam of the flavors of India, Thailand and China, all of which border Myanmar. Many Americans are more familiar with those cuisines, which provided an entry point for San Franciscans. Early reviewers of Nan Yang and Mandalay relied on such touchstones to explain the restaurants' stews and salads — and to help both restaurants attract legions of devotees.

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"Without question, this is the best Burmese food I've ever eaten," Bea Pixa wrote in The San Francisco Examiner in August 1984. "Honesty compels me to add that it's also the first Burmese dinner I've ever eaten."

But the success of a few Burmese restaurants in the 1980s doesn't fully explain what's going on now. According to Batalova, California's Burmese immigrants are split about evenly between the Los Angeles region and the Bay Area. But so many more Burmese restaurants operate in the Bay Area.

Many credit Joycelyn Lee, the owner of Burma Superstar, for the popularity of Burmese cuisine in San Francisco.Jim Wilson/The New York Times

For this final piece of the puzzle, we probably have to thank Burma Superstar.

The restaurant, on Clement Street in Inner Richmond, opened in 1992 but became a viral success after Joycelyn Lee bought it in 2000 with her husband at the time. Lee told me that when her family assumed ownership, Burmese food still felt like an uncomfortable novelty to many Americans. So she rebranded the dishes, pumped up the advertising, worked to attract American palates and sensibilities and spawned a new generation of Burmese restaurants in the Bay. Burma Superstar itself now has several spinoffs.

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Without Burma Superstar, "I don't believe we would have reached this level of popularity of Burmese food in the Bay Area," Dennis Lin, who owns the nearby Burmese Kitchen, told The Infatuation. "All of our success goes back to what they were doing in the beginning."

Chen also gives credit to Burma Superstar. But his restaurant retains its own longtime fans.

Many of Mandalay's customers have moved to other parts of California, or to neighboring states, he told me. But when they visit family in the Bay Area, they always stop by Mandalay to have tea leaf salad or coconut chicken noodles. Burmese restaurants typically don't exist in their new cities, he said.

They all tell him: "We miss your food."

For more:

Enjoy all of The New York Times in one subscription — the original reporting and analysis, plus puzzles from Games, recipes from Cooking, product reviews from Wirecutter and sports journalism from The Athletic. Experience it all with a New York Times All Access subscription.

State workers removing garbage at the Wood Street homeless encampment in Oakland last year.Lauren Segal for The New York Times

The rest of the news

  • One of California's largest homeless encampments was shut down recently in Oakland, but the closure hasn't solved the state's problem with homelessness.
  • The California State Bar suspended more than 1,600 lawyers for violating rules that were devised after the Los Angeles lawyer Thomas Girardi was accused of stealing millions of dollars from his clients, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Firefighters are battling two big blazes in California, The Associated Press reports.

Southern California

  • Hollywood studios have begun removing big-budget movies from the 2023 release calendar because of the actors' strike.
  • An appeals court ruled that the 2020 Los Angeles County criminal justice initiative known as Measure J, which would invest millions in housing, mental health services and jail diversion programs, is constitutional, The Los Angeles Times reports.

Central California

Northern California

  • Conflicting demands from BART and Berkeley have stalled a city plan to build 3,600 units of transit-oriented housing, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.Jason Henry for The New York Times

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Neil Brown, who lives in Altadena. Neil recommends visiting the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art: "The (amazing!) Diego Rivera mural from the San Francisco Art Institute is on display at SFMOMA, and it's on the ground floor, so no admission fee required!"

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

Fourteen new books coming in August.

Retta Abraham and Marissa Bergmann in Costa Rica last month. El Velo Photography

And before you go, some good news

Marissa Bergmann was visiting New York from San Francisco in May 2021 when she met Retta Abraham. He sat down next to her at a rooftop party in Brooklyn and started chatting.

They turned out to have a lot in common. Their mothers are both of Japanese heritage, and their backgrounds had inspired in them both a vision of their future selves: to be surrounded by children and grandchildren.

Marissa, now 33, said that Retta, now 40, paused and reached out his hand: "Like in an old movie, he was like, 'Do you want to fall in love?'" she said. "I wanted to say, 'Yes, let's do it,' but I had to be cool, so I asked if we could dance first."

They danced, and this month, they married.

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

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

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