CPAC plays the hits

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Mar 02, 2023 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eli Okun

Presented by

Emergent

BREAKING — “Trump can be sued by police over Jan. 6 riot, Justice Department says,” by WaPo’s Rachel Weiner

Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, right, accompanied by Matt Schlapp Chairman of the American Conservative Union, speaks during Conservative Political Action Conference, CPAC 2023, at the National Harbor, in Oxon Hill, Md., Thursday, March 2, 2023. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

Matt Schlapp said Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) “might just be the most powerful man in Washington, D.C.” | Jose Luis Magana/AP Photo

CPAC KICKS OFF — Amid growing chatter about various top Republicans skipping the ever-more-MAGA CPAC, DONALD TRUMP lashed out this morning at his rivals in the party: “The only reason certain ‘candidates’ won’t be going to CPAC is because the crowds have no interest in anything they have to say,” he posted on Truth Social. And as the Club for Growth hosts a counter-programming retreat in Palm Beach, Trump railed against the group: “Except when they worked with me, their track record is awful. They need new ‘Leadership.’”

Trump will speak Saturday night, in a speech he described as a “monster.” But the conference got underway this morning with some high-profile speakers and discussions. Some of the most notable snippets so far:

— MATT SCHLAPP introduced Rep. JIM JORDAN (R-Ohio) by saying, “There’s a lot of chatter in the media about who’s here and not here. I’m really proud to be standing alongside someone I think might just be the most powerful man in Washington, D.C.”

— Rep. RALPH NORMAN (R-S.C.) called Joint Chiefs of Staff Chair Gen. MARK MILLEY “a traitor” and referred to VP KAMALA HARRIS as “the giggler.”

— Rep. SCOTT PERRY (R-Pa.) dangled the possibility of shrinking office space for federal officials who don’t comply with House GOP oversight requests: “If they’re not interested in showing up … I’m in charge now on the Transportation Committee of federal leases. Huh. Huh. Isn’t that something? I wonder whose leases might be coming [up].”

— STEVE BANNON got a chant started about taking down the Chinese Communist Party, as Meridith McGraw captures among various photos and videos from the scene. And MAGA Inc., a Trump-affiliated super PAC, has a photo booth in an Oval Office replica.

YOU’VE GOT TIME — Sen. MARCO RUBIO (R-Fla.) today reintroduced his bill to make daylight saving time permanent, which snuck through the Senate in a surprise last year but died in the House. Rubio has a bipartisan group of 11 co-sponsors in the upper chamber, and Rep. VERN BUCHANAN (R-Fla.) is introducing a House version of the bill. Will it meet a different fate there with Republicans in charge this year? More from The Hill

PSA: You’ve still got nine days of early-morning sunshine — clocks spring ahead at 2 a.m. on March 12.

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — A new letter led by the Washington Center for Equitable Growth urges congressional leaders to lift the debt ceiling “promptly and without conditions” to stave off catastrophic default. “A swift and severe economic downturn could follow, with unnecessary layoffs across the economy,” they write. “Higher borrowing costs for the federal government, and indeed for all Americans, could remain with us for a long time.” The letter, signed by more than 200 economists of varying ideological predilections, is most notable for some of the big names involved, including BEN BERNANKE, ROBERT REICH and JOSEPH STIGLITZ. Read it here

Good Thursday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. What’s the best and/or cringiest piece of CPAC swag you’ve spotted? Drop me a line at eokun@politico.com.

 

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ALL POLITICS

CATCH A RISING STAR — At House Democrats’ conference in Baltimore this week, Maryland Gov. WES MOORE is attracting lots of buzz and long selfie lines, NBC’s Scott Wong and Kate Santaliz report. Moore says he’s focused on the job he just started, and he’s backing President JOE BIDEN for 2024. But the party is chattering about Moore’s future potential.

Rep. STENY HOYER (D-Md.): “I saw this young man — and I’ve been in politics for 120 years — I said, ‘This guy’s got it.’”

YOWZA — A new Roanoke College poll finds Virginia Gov. GLENN YOUNGKIN crushing Biden 55% to 39% among registered voters in the state in a hypothetical 2024 matchup. Florida Gov. RON DeSANTIS leads Biden 48% to 43%. But Biden has a slight edge over Trump among Virginia voters, 47% to 46%. And among Virginia Republicans, Trump is the top pick for the nomination, leading DeSantis 39% to 28%. (Youngkin’s a distant third.)

BOTTLING KOCH — Koch Industries today is expected to name DAVE ROBERTSON as its new co-CEO and JIM HANNAN as its new president as it prepares for the next generation beyond the Koch brothers, Semafor’s Liz Hoffman scooped.

CONGRESS

McCARTHY ON CHINA — Speaker KEVIN McCARTHY tells Fox News’ Brooke Singman that he wants to see this Congress pass bipartisan legislation on China, and that the Biden administration needs to project a stronger message to Beijing. McCarthy highlighted the flow of fentanyl from China as a top priority where he wants to see Biden get more aggressive with Chinese President XI JINPING. “I want to empower the president,” McCarthy said. “If we are united in the House, it gives the president a stronger hand. In essence, the House can try to give him a backbone.”

THE END OF SHAME — “George Santos, MAGA It Girl,” by N.Y. Mag’s Shawn McCreesh: “Like ANNA DELVEY, he’s brazened his way through the public shame of his own behavior — even as more and more of it keeps surfacing — and is now enjoying the notoriety on the other side. The right has decided to embrace him as, if nothing else, the ultimate troll of the left … [S]ome in [Rep. GEORGE] SANTOS’s orbit tell me they fully expect him to run for reelection. He’s now having fun with it.” Plus plenty of scene-y details on VISH BURRA’s shitposting journey to becoming scandal’s right-hand man

FRIENDLY FIRE — Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) blasted Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG over the East Palestine, Ohio, mess: “I have concerns,” he said, when CNN’s Manu Raju asked Manchin if he had confidence in the secretary. “I think that basically Pete is not getting high grades right now.”

 

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AMERICA AND THE WORLD

FACE TO FACE — For the first time since Russia invaded Ukraine, Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN and Russian Foreign Minister SERGEY LAVROV met in person today at a G-20 confab in India, per Kelly Hooper. It was just a 10-minute, unscheduled conversation, but the U.S. said Blinken focused on New Start, PAUL WHELAN and a reassurance that U.S. support for Ukraine wouldn’t fade. He “didn’t get the impression from the Russian foreign minister that Moscow’s behavior would change in any way.”

IRAN LATEST — “U.S., Europe Split on Response to Iran’s Near-Weapons-Grade Nuclear Enrichment,” by WSJ’s Laurence Norman: “Britain, France and Germany wanted to formally censure Iran at an IAEA board of governors meeting next week by passing a resolution calling out Iran’s nuclear activities … However, U.S. officials are arguing against a rebuke although a final decision hasn’t yet been taken. Washington wants to see what the agency concludes about the production of the material.”

BORDER SONG — Illegal immigration across the U.S.-Canada border is surging into our northern neighbor, and the Quebec and Ontario communities on the front lines aren’t happy, NYT’s Norimitsu Onishi reports. “Using the kind of anti-migrant language rarely heard in Canada, opposition politicians are calling on the government to deploy the police.” And it’s putting some pressure on the relationship between Biden and PM JUSTIN TRUDEAU.

DANCE OF THE SUPERPOWERS — “China Trumps U.S. in Key Technology Research, Report Says,” by WSJ’s James Areddy: “The report, published Thursday by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, puts Chinese researchers ahead of Americans in 37 of 44 technologies examined.”

HOW DOBBS IS SEEN OVERSEAS — Nearly 200 human rights groups, nonprofits and civil society organizations worldwide are calling on the U.N. to step in to protect abortion rights in the U.S., WaPo’s Adela Suliman reports. The letter

THE ECONOMY

THE UNEMPLOYMENT PICTURE — New jobless claims ticked down last week to 190,000, signaling that the labor market is still looking pretty tight in the U.S. More from Bloomberg

INFLATION NATION — “Fed Might Be Winning Inflation Fight, Depending on Index Used,” by WSJ’s Gwynn Guilford: “Two measures of U.S. inflation are now telling a similar story. But those measures are likely to diverge this year, with one signaling the Federal Reserve’s work is nearly done and the other suggesting the opposite.”

MEDIAWATCH

ANNALS OF INFLUENCE — “Newsmax taps ex-congressman Jack Kingston to help in its brawl with DirecTV,” by Caitlin Oprysko: “The conservative news channel, which disappeared from DirecTV’s airwaves in January amid a dispute over fees paid to carriers, has enlisted former Rep. JACK KINGSTON (R-Ga.) and longtime GOP aide TOMMY ANDREWS of Squire Patton Boggs to escalate its fight in Washington.”

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

IMMIGRATION FILES — “Fleeing for Your Life? There’s An App for That,” by Texas Monthly’s Jack Herrera: “The Biden administration has replaced key elements of our 50-year-old asylum system with ‘CBP One,’ a smartphone application. It looks like the future—but potentially a dystopian one.”

THE NEW ABORTION LANDSCAPE — If a federal judge makes the unprecedented move to strike down the FDA’s 2000 approval of the abortion pill mifepristone, the effects could be felt far and wide across states that haven’t restricted the procedure. NYT’s Allison McCann and Amy Schoenfeld Walker have some helpful graphics showing where such a ruling would have the most significant impact: One Maine provider says “this could be bigger than Dobbs.”

 

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POLICY CORNER

COMING SOON — “Communities await first U.S. limits on ‘forever chemicals,’” by AP’s Michael Phillis and Brittany Peterson: “The Environmental Protection Agency is expected to propose restrictions on harmful [PFAS chemicals] in drinking water after finding they are dangerous in amounts so small as to be undetectable. But experts say removing them will cost billions, a burden that will fall hardest on small communities with few resources.”

PLAYBOOKERS

WHAT GARRETT IS READING — “Merrick Garland Is a Huge Taylor Swift Fan,” by WSJ’s Sadie Gurman: “‘My favorite song is “Shake It Off,”’ he said in an interview.” Plus: Bill Barr on the bagpipes and Jeff Sessions on “The Pirates of Penzance”

DEPT. OF SLOGANEERING — As Edith Childs retires, the local South Carolina official who coined “Fired up! Ready to go!” reunited virtually with Barack Obama, as AP’s Meg Kinnard reports from Columbia. Watch the video

OUT AND ABOUT — SPOTTED at Norwegian Ambassador Anniken Krutnes’ residence last night for the embassy’s Arctic Cool event: Finnish Ambassador Mikko Hautala, Estonian Ambassador Kristjan Prikk, Dutch Ambassador André Haspels, Sens. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Jim Risch (R-Idaho), Erna Solberg, Ine Eriksen Søreide, Rheanne Wirkkala, Geoffrey Pyatt, Christina Sevilla and Artur Orkisz. 

— SPOTTED at a reception Tuesday night celebrating the expansion and renovation of the Home Depot’s government relations office: Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.), Reps. Mike Collins (R-Ga.), Austin Scott (R-Ga.), Drew Ferguson (R-Ga.), Rick Allen (R-Ga.) and Deborah Ross (D-N.C.), Missouri AG Andrew Bailey, Teresa Roseborough, Norman Jemal, Bob Milkovich, Paul Tetreault, Mary Ann Gomez Orta and Catherine Townsend. 

— SPOTTED last night at a cowboy reception at Reata in Fort Worth, Texas: Reps. Kay Granger (R-Texas), Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.), Austin Scott (R-Ga.), Doug LaMalfa (R-Calif.), Jim Baird (R-Ind.), Cliff Bentz (R-Ore.), John Duarte (R-Calif.), Michelle Fischbach (R-Minn.), Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.), Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R-Iowa), David Rouzer (R-N.C.) and David Valadao (R-Calif.), and Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker.

The Peace Corps honored returning volunteers and public servants at the 2023 Franklin H. Williams award ceremony last night at the Planet Word Museum. Awardees included Charlayne Hunter Gault, Nicole Banister, Lavar Thomas, Judith Oki, Terrell Starr and Rob Watson Jr. Pic 

TRANSITIONS — Jerron Hawkins is now a policy adviser at DOJ’s Office of Community Relations Services. He previously was a strategic consultant for My Brother’s Keeper Alliance within the Obama Foundation. … Jeffrey Davis is now a partner with White & Case’s tax practice. He previously was a partner at Mayer Brown. … Andrew Becht is joining the Export-Import Bank as director of scheduling. He previously was scheduling director for Rep. Charlie Crist (D-Fla.). …

… Allison Binney is now a partner at Pace Companies. She previously was a partner at Akin Gump. … Amanda Brown Lierman is now senior director for policy and engagement for North America at GoFundMe. She most recently was executive director of Supermajority. … Physicians for Human Rights has added Saman Zia-Zarifi as executive director and Gareth Crawford as COO. Zia-Zarifi previously was secretary-general of the International Commission of Jurists. Crawford previously was president and CEO of the Carey Institute for Global Good.

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Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com or text us at 202-556-3307. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike DeBonis, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Setota Hailemariam and Bethany Irvine.

Correction: Yesterday’s Playbook PM misstated Mike Froman’s name.

 

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California Today: Digging out before the next snowstorm

Across the state, mountainous regions have been inundated with impressive amounts of snow — and more is coming this weekend.

It's Thursday. California continues to see heavy snow this wild winter. Plus, Gov. Gavin Newsom is seeing a bump in the polls.

Pine Mountain Club on Sunday.Jenna Schoenefeld for The New York Times

Snow has engulfed mountainous regions of California in the past week, shutting down long stretches of roadways, closing Yosemite National Park and burying many communities.

The extreme weather forced Yosemite to close on Saturday, initially for a few days and now indefinitely. Structures in the park and rangers' homes remain encased in deep snow, and power is intermittent, Scott Gediman, a park ranger and spokesman, said.

Higher-elevation areas of the park have recently recorded as much as 15 feet of snow, while 40 inches accumulated on Tuesday alone in Yosemite Valley, breaking a record of 36 inches set in 1969, Gediman said.

Farther north, a critical stretch of Interstate 80 that cuts across northern Sierra Nevada from Applegate to the Nevada border was closed for days because of the snow and poor visibility before it partly reopened Wednesday afternoon.

Some parts of California are facing particularly dangerous conditions. In the San Bernardino Mountains, communities have been deluged with seven feet of snow and emergency crews have been shuttling food and medicine to stranded residents.

In Olympic Valley, northwest of Tahoe City, an avalanche crashed into a three-story apartment building Tuesday evening, though all occupants safely evacuated, according to the Placer County Sheriff's Office.

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Brandon Schwartz, the lead avalanche forecaster at the Sierra Avalanche Center, said that instability — the greatest factor — peaked late Tuesday and has since subsided. An additional storm is expected to bring at least a foot of snow to the valley floor of the Lake Tahoe area this weekend, Schwartz added.

California's major ski resorts benefited from the recent storms, at least once the snowfall took a break. Numerous spots shut down on Tuesday, including Palisades Tahoe and Alpine Meadows. Palisades has seen 12 feet of snow in the past week and more than 500 inches of snow this season, Patrick Lacey, a public relations manager, said.

"This has definitely been the biggest storm so far of the season," he said. "In the High Sierra, it comes all at once. It's pretty insane to see this amount of snow."

At Donner Pass, the U.C. Berkeley Central Sierra Snow Lab has recorded 141.9 inches in the past seven days and 531 inches, or a little more than 44 feet, so far this season. And while the recent snowfall has been significant, it pales in comparison to the station's all-time snowiest season, 1951-52, during which it recorded more than 67 feet of snow, the lead scientist and manager Andrew Schwartz said.

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Still, conditions in the area remain treacherous, with many back roads buried under five to seven feet of snow, said Schwartz, who lives in Soda Springs.

"It really comes down to being able to hunker down and get through it because there's absolutely no way that anybody can travel right now with conditions like these," he said.

The recent heavy snowfall will also help ameliorate the state's short-term drought conditions, Schwartz said. But California will need more than one season of exceptional snowfall to offset its drought.

"Though this has been an incredible year," he said, "we still probably need another one to two years of above-average conditions to really get us out of the long-term drought as well."

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Sirhan Sirhan at a parole hearing in San Diego in 2021.California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, via Associated Press

The rest of the news

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Policing: The largest police union in Los Angeles is proposing that officers stop responding to certain lower-level crimes and mental health episodes to focus more on handling violent crimes, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Oil spill settlement: The shipping companies responsible for a 2021 oil spill off the coast of Southern California will pay nearly $97 million to settle a lawsuit, The Associated Press reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Hospital challenges: Hospitals in the Fresno area are bracing for setbacks after California officially ended its Covid-19 declaration of emergency, The Fresno Bee reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Unpaid wages: The California Labor Commission is suing the owners of the Beacon Grand hotel in San Francisco over $730,000 in unpaid wages, The SFist reports.
Con Poulos for The New York Times.

What we're eating

Slow cooker spinach-artichoke chicken stew.

Lake Temescal in Oakland.Michael Macor/The San Francisco Chronicle, via Getty Images

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Marianne Lonsdale, who recommends exploring the dozens of East Bay Regional Parks:

"My husband and I live in Oakland, and during the pandemic we discovered that day trips within the East Bay Regional Park District were a wonderful quick getaway. I've hiked in the Oakland parks for many years and consider them jewels — Lake Temescal, Sibley and Redwood Regional Park, to name just a few — and never cease to be surprised that these parks exist so close to an urban center. During the pandemic, I expanded my day trips to other locations in the Park District.

The Park District has 73 parks in Alameda and Contra Costa Counties that line the San Francisco Bay and then stretch inland to rolling hills. Some are a five-minute drive from my home, and most are not more than 30 minutes away. The Park District preserves and protects 125,000 acres of open space.

We loved taking our aging dog in his stroller, and the Park District made this easy by providing a brochure — one each for the southern and northern regions — with information on over 30 hikes that are one to three miles long and can accommodate strollers and wheelchairs.

One day we packed our dog and his stroller in the car and headed to Quarry Lakes in Fremont. Easy flat trails looped around Horseshoe and Rainbow lakes. We awed at the variety of birds, spotting pelicans, mud ducks, hummingbirds, cormorants and hawks. My heart soared watching a pelican fly across the lake and then skim the water to land. Our dog leaned forward in his stroller, maybe missing the old days of chasing ducks."

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.

East to West Barber Academy

And before you go, some good news

By 16, Fredo Olan "ran into trouble and made mistakes kids make" growing up in Lancaster, Pa., he recalled. By 24, he was living with his mother and cycling in and out of prison.

Always adept with the clippers, he saw a commercial on television for a beauty school and decided to give it a try. Years later, it worked out better than he might have imagined. He's now a father of three and living with his wife in Visalia, where he owns East to West Hair Artistry.

Last September, Olan expanded his operations to include an East to West Barber Academy. His aim is not only to train other aspiring barbers but also to give struggling young adults an opportunity to find their way in life — just as he did. "If I could help these people out, and have these students make better choices, it can benefit them and their families," he said. "And I'm all for it. That's what I want to do."

Since opening, the academy has enrolled 38 students. Read more in the Visalia Times Delta.

Thanks for reading. We'll be back tomorrow.

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

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