Will Hurd gets in; Rick Scott gets ideas

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Jun 22, 2023 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eli Okun

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FILE - Then Rep. Will Hurd, R-Texas, speaks during a hearing of the House Intelligence Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Nov. 19, 2019. Hurd, a onetime CIA officer and fierce critic of Donald Trump, announced on Thursday that he's running for president, hoping to build momentum as a more moderate alternative to the Republican primary field's early front-runner. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)

Will Hurd enters the race as, to be kind, a significant long shot. | Alex Brandon, File/AP Photo

ANOTHER ONE — Former Rep. WILL HURD (R-Texas) jumped into the Republican presidential primary today, becoming the 13th or 14th (depending on whom you count) major candidate in the very crowded field.

Hurd made the announcement on “CBS Mornings,” where he said he wanted to offer a forward-looking vision for America. Striking an optimistic tone, Hurd said he wanted to focus on improving education and the economy and bringing the country together. His launch video starts on a slightly darker note, warning that “the soul of our country is under attack,” from drugs to inflation to crime, and calling out President JOE BIDEN and DONALD TRUMP by name. But Hurd casts himself as a common-sense purveyor of solutions: “It’s not a given that this vision for America will happen, but it can if we focus on our timeless principles and limitless potential, not self-interested politics.”

It’s a message, and a candidate, from a different time in Republican politics. Hurd was seen as a rising GOP star just a few years ago. A moderate, Black former CIA agent who represented a majority-Hispanic swing district on the Texas border, Hurd stood out in Congress for his bipartisan chops and tech/cyber expertise. Chatter grew about a run for higher office in his future.

Then Trump transformed the GOP, and Hurd opted not to run for reelection in 2020.

Now he enters the race as a significant long shot, to be kind. But Hurd could still be one to watch — as one of the few candidates offering a genuinely different ideological perspective and perhaps just the second, behind CHRIS CHRISTIE, willing to criticize Trump directly. His video calls Trump “a lawless, selfish, failed politician” who would lose to Biden again.

If he wants the chance to lob a line like that on the debate stage, he’ll have to move quickly: Hurd doesn’t have much time to meet the significant fundraising/polling thresholds for the first debate this summer. And he could be competing for a small slice of the GOP pie.

FLORIDA MEN — Trump world, as you’d expect, could not be happier about the ever-balkanizing field. Campaign spokesman JASON MILLER this morning cast Hurd’s entry as further evidence of Florida Gov. RON DeSANTIS having “failed to seal the deal” as Trump’s ordained challenger.

Further evidence that Miller might be correct … Sen. RICK SCOTT (R-Fla.) is weighing a shocking late jump into the presidential race, NYT’s Jonathan Swan and Maggie Haberman just reported. He’d be the fourth Floridian in the race, a wealthy self-funder, a direct DeSantis competitor and a candidate with a distinctive ideological approach.

Nota bene: If he does jump into the presidential race, the campaign for his Senate seat would be upended, too. Said Scott’s longtime spokesman CHRIS HARTLINE, “It’s flattering that some have mentioned the possibility of Senator Scott running for President, but as he’s said many times, he’s running for re-election to the Senate.”

A LA MODI — Biden and Indian PM NARENDRA MODI will begin their press conference any moment now — an extraordinarily rare instance of Modi taking questions from reporters.

One of the most concrete outcomes of the leaders’ meetings this week is a significant deal for General Electric to make fighter jet engines in India and for India to buy U.S.-made drones from General Atomics, Doug Palmer reports. Though it’s still subject to review by Congress, the agreement marks an increasingly intertwined defense trade partnership between the world’s largest democracies.

Coming soon: Speaker KEVIN McCARTHY told reporters that he and House Minority Leader HAKEEM JEFFRIES plan to lead a congressional delegation to India together in October.

THE DIFI DEFENDERS — Sen. DIANNE FEINSTEIN turns 90 today, and despite mounting questions about her cognitive and physical health, many women in the Senate are defending her as fiercely as ever against what they see as a double standard, the Boston Globe’s Tal Kopan reports. Many of them recall male senators who continued serving despite “similar challenges,” like STROM THURMOND and ROBERT BYRD. And they’re wary of the role sexism has played in the debate about Feinstein, “taking the calls for her to resign as an almost personal offense.” (Critics say it’s not sexist to want someone who can’t do the job to step down.)

Good Thursday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. Drop me a line at eokun@politico.com.

 

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2024 WATCH

TALKER — “Why Not Whitmer?” by The Atlantic’s Mark Leibovich: “The Michigan governor isn’t running for president. But she is happy to be interrogated over whether she might change her mind.”

THE REELECT — Biden plans to make abortion rights a centerpiece of his reelection campaign, continuing Democrats’ 2022 playbook, campaign manager JULIE CHÁVEZ RODRÍGUEZ tells Holly Otterbein and Myah Ward. Despite Biden’s complex personal history on the issue, he’s now “poised to run the most overtly abortion rights platform of any general election candidate in political history.”

CLIP AND SAVE — “DeSantis won’t say if he’ll support Trump in 2024,” by Gary Fineout: “DeSantis sidestepped that part of the question and instead said Trump was ‘full of it’ for criticizing how DeSantis responded to the Covid-19 pandemic.”

Staffing up … DeSantis world is maneuvering into full campaign mode as two of his top aides from Tallahassee leave the governor’s office for roles supporting his 2024 bid, Gary reports in Florida Playbook. Comms director TARYN FENSKE will join the Never Back Down super PAC. And STEPHANIE KOPELOUSOS, director of legislative and intergovernmental affairs, will join the campaign.

Endorsement roundup … DeSantis has landed the backing of 15 South Carolina state legislators, AP’s Meg Kinnard scooped from Columbia. With a heavy footprint in the Upstate, the batch of endorsements aims to strengthen DeSantis’ standing in the state ahead of a town hall there today.

JUDICIARY SQUARE

SCOTUS WATCH — “Supreme Court rules against Navajo Nation in water rights dispute,” by NBC’s Lawrence Hurley: “The justices, divided 5-4, said a lawsuit the tribe filed against the federal government must be thrown out. Writing for the majority, Justice BRETT KAVANAUGH said that [an] 1868 treaty with the Navajo Nation did not require the U.S. government to take active steps to secure water access.”

“Supreme Court Denies Federal Inmate’s Chance to Challenge Conviction,” by Bloomberg Law’s Lydia Wheeler: “In a 6-3 decision, the justices ruled Thursday against a Missouri man fighting his conviction in a habeas claim after a 2019 Supreme Court ruling changed the standard of proof used to convict him of unlawfully possessing a firearm as a felon.”

 

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WAR IN UKRAINE

SIREN FOR KYIV — So far, the much-vaunted Ukrainian counteroffensive is “not meeting expectations on any front,” Western and U.S. officials tell CNN’s Jim Sciutto. As both sides suffer heavy losses, Ukraine has enjoyed less success, and Russia proven more difficult to break down, than expected. Moscow has managed to use air power, missiles and mines well, though Ukraine is trying to adapt to their resistance. But, but, but: It’s still pretty early. Some officials say they’ll wait until next month to really assess how the counteroffensive is going, and they sound more optimistic in the longer term.

Latest on the ground … Ukraine has hit a key bridge helping supply Russian forces from Crimea, indicating a different tactic to weaken Moscow’s forces when frontal assaults have yielded less success, WSJ’s Thomas Grove and Matthew Luxmoore report.

The arms race … The number of howitzer artillery shells produced by the U.S. to support the war effort is skyrocketing, WSJ’s Alistair MacDonald and Andrew Tangel scooped from Le Bourget, France. The monthly total has jumped from 14,000 to 24,000, and the U.S. intends to reach the 70,000-80,000 range by the 2025 fiscal year, an Army assistant secretary says.

BIG INVESTIGATION — “Kyrgyz, Kazakh Companies Send Western Tech To Firms Linked To Kremlin War Machine,” by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s Carl Schreck, Kubat Kasymbekov, Manas Qaiyrtaiuly, Riin Aljas, Kubatbek Aibashov and Kyrylo Ovsyaniy in Bishkek: “The issue has raised the specter of so-called secondary sanctions targeting the two Central Asian countries.”

MORE POLITICS

SINEMATOGRAPHY — The digital tea leaves from Sen. KYRSTEN SINEMA (I-Ariz.) indicate she may be headed for a reelection bid, FWIW’s Kyle Tharp reports. Her campaign has spent $100,000 on Facebook and Instagram ads targeting Arizonans this year, outstripping Rep. RUBEN GALLEGO (D-Ariz.) and almost everyone else in the state in the past month.

IT’S 2022 SOMEWHERE — Remember the ballot signature scandal that upended the Michigan gubernatorial race last year, knocking multiple leading Republicans out of the primary race? Today it’s ending in criminal charges, as state AG DANA NESSEL announces multiple counts against three people accused of gathering fraudulent signatures, the Detroit Free Press’ Paul Egan scooped.

 

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CONGRESS

THE TALENTED MR. SANTOS — A judge made public the names of Rep. GEORGE SANTOS’ (R-N.Y.) bond guarantors today after he fought to keep them under seal. It turns out to have just been his father, GERCINO DOS SANTOS, and aunt, ELMA PREVEN, per Semafor’s Kadia Goba.

TOUCHING THE THIRD RAIL — At least some Republicans in Congress have not yet been dissuaded from proposing entitlement reforms. The Republican Study Committee’s budget proposal suggests changes to Medicare and Social Security, Semafor’s Joseph Zeballos-Roig reports, even as leading GOP presidential candidates keep their distance.

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

THE ABORTION LANDSCAPE — “Abortion in Florida remains in limbo until conservative state high court ruling,” by Gary Fineout in Tallahassee: “There is no set time when the Florida Supreme Court will act, but abortion-rights advocates are anticipating the court will allow recently passed restrictions to remain in place.”

At the same time, abortion rights activists are working hard to get an amendment on the 2024 ballot that would enshrine the right in the state constitution, The Messenger’s Marc Caputo reports. The bipartisan effort is gathering signatures quickly, and polling suggests they have public opinion on their side. The big question is whether they’ll be able to reach the 60% threshold needed for passage.

COME TO YOUR CENSUS — New Census Bureau data from 2022 released today offers an interesting window into how the U.S. population is changing, with significant political and policy implications. Among the notable findings:

  • The median age is now 38.9, the highest on record, per NYT’s Dana Goldstein. Low birth rates, with insufficient immigration to compensate, is aging the country, which will alter the economy and policymakers’ decisions as the trend continues.
  • In a partial reversal of the Great Migration, Black Americans are increasingly leaving cities in the North and West for the suburbs and the South, WSJ’s Jimmy Vielkind, Jon Kamp, Paul Overberg and Jack Gillum report. College-educated young people are especially driving the trend.
  • Texas is officially now plurality Hispanic, The Texas Tribune’s Alexa Ura reports. The state is now 40.2% Hispanic and 39.8% non-Hispanic white.

MEDIAWATCH

THEY COME WITH PRICES — Vice Media has found a buyer: Fortress Investment Group and others will acquire the bankrupt company for $225 million, NYT’s Lauren Hirsch and Benjamin Mullin scooped. The deal still requires a judge’s approval to go through.

 

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POLICY CORNER

SWAMP READ — “DOT Researchers Suggested a Way to Make Big Trucks Safer. After Meeting With Lobbyists, Agency Officials Rejected the Idea,” by Kartikay Mehrotra and A.C. Thompson for ProPublica and Frontline: “The Department of Transportation allowed trucking lobbyists to review an unpublished report recommending a safety device that could save lives by preventing pedestrians and cyclists from getting crushed under large trucks.”

PLAYBOOKERS

SPOTTED getting drinks at Morton’s last night: Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Jeff Miller.

OUT AND ABOUT — Rep. Marc Molinaro (R-N.Y.) hosted a fundraiser at Stellina Pizzeria in Arlington Tuesday night. Guests made their own pizza, like Molinaro used to do when he was younger, led by Stellina chef Matteo Venini. SPOTTED: Annika Olson, Michele Stanley, Kevin Dowling, Jon Taets, Donn Salvosa, Elizabeth Baker, Trip Stanford, Lindsey Ledwin and Chris Berardini.

— SPOTTED last night at British Ambassador Karen Pierce and Charles Roxburgh’s residence celebrating the coronation of King Charles and Queen Camilla and the King’s Official Birthday: second gentleman Doug Emhoff, Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), Anne Neuberger, Mary Ellen Callahan, Tina Brown, John McCarthy, Mariel Saez, Doug Thornell, Peter Rawlinson, Jessica Nigro, Alex Marquardt, Josh Dawsey, Matt Paul, Sam Sheekey, David Greenberg and Tammy Haddad.

MEDIA MOVE — Brian Tyler Cohen is joining MSNBC as a contributor, TVNewser’s Mark Mwachiro scoops. Cohen currently is a YouTuber and host of the podcast “No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen.”

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California Today: We’re adding new songs to our California soundtrack

The playlist includes 19 new tracks recommended by readers.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Thursday. We're updating our California Soundtrack. Plus, why so many sea lions are dying along the California coast.

The Red Hot Chili Peppers performing at the 2022 MTV V.M.A.s in New Jersey, a state celebrated by Bruce Springsteen, if not by our California Soundtrack.Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

One of my favorite things about writing this newsletter is getting to hear from readers.

Nearly 40 million people live in California, and each of us has our own story of how we came to be here and what this place means to us. The diversity of those experiences, across geographies and decades, comes to bear in our California Soundtrack, a collaborative project of this newsletter that tries to capture all of the Golden State in music.

Today, I've added 19 tracks to our ever-evolving playlist, based on your recommendations. Among the most requested this round were "Dani California" by the Red Hot Chili Peppers (2006), "Hollywood Freaks" by Beck (1999) and "Carmel" by Joe Sample (1979).

You can peruse the full list here (the latest additions are in bold) or listen here.

As always, the California Soundtrack is a work in progress. Email your own song recommendation and a few lines about why you think it deserves inclusion to CAToday@nytimes.com. Please include your name and the city where you live.

Here's some of what you shared about your picks, lightly edited:

"Love Street" by the Doors (1968)

"As explained in a Los Angeles city historical marker, 'Love Street' was written about Rothdell Trail and the surrounding area in Laurel Canyon where lead singer Jim Morrison resided. The lyric 'There's this store where the creatures meet,' refers to the Canyon Country Store in Laurel Canyon that's still in business today." — Dino Ladki, West Hollywood

"Best Kept Secret" by case/lang/veirs (2016)

"It is a lovely, bright song about someone who is feeling down, calls their love in Silver Lake, and is lifted up. This song never ceases to brighten my day." — Lesley Golkin, San Francisco

"Grant Avenue" by Pat Suzuki, from "Flower Drum Song" (1958)

"California's own Pat Suzuki, who was interned with her family during World War II, starred in the original Broadway production of Rodgers & Hammerstein's 'Flower Drum Song' (1958), which is set in San Francisco. One of the songs is 'Grant Avenue,' a boisterous dance number celebrating one of the oldest streets in the city's Chinatown district. Dated, yes, but still an interesting relic of its time." — Dan Humiston, McKinleyville

"Artesia" by Chris Gaffney (1992)

"This song recalls teenagers cruising through a then-rural part of Southeast Los Angeles County and includes the fabulous line, 'Because now when the wind blows from out of Artesia, you can't smell 1965' — a reference to the cows that used to inhabit the area." — Greg Johnson, Irvine

"405" by RAC (2014)

"This song is so poppy and light — and it touches on so many aspects of L.A.: the ubiquitous car culture/driving, the famous/infamous boulevards, the beach sunsets colored by smog." — Andrea Lynch, Beaverton

"California" by O.A.R. (2019)

"In the summer of 2020, I was living outside of Philly. But in a world where the only thing that was keeping me sane was spending time outside with my friends, the idea of a frigid northeast 'Covid winter' was terrifying.

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My family had a condo in Encinitas and I had a couple good college friends who lived in San Diego County, but most were in the Northeast. I was approaching 30, had been living in the Northeast since elementary school, and I had a job that would surely *eventually* require me to return to the area. Still, I wanted to flee to San Diego, but it just seemed so daunting!

I put together a pros and cons sheet, but still wasn't decided. I went to shower and think it over. I put on Counting Crows Pandora and the very first song was O.A.R.'s 'California.' The chorus asked the very question on my mind: 'Who said you can't go where you wanna, California' and replies, 'Hey son, go to California. Dance with the angels, dress how you wanna.' The timing was so perfect — and the words so powerful and direct — that it seemed foolish to ignore.

In the end, I did what I wanted. I packed my bags and moved to California. Now I love my life in Pacific Beach, and I'm never moving back east! It's a life-changing song for me." — Dan Montgomery, San Diego

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.

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A dead dolphin and a California sea lion showing symptoms of domoic acid poisoning.Staci Kaye-Carr, Channel Islands Marine & Wildlife Institute

The rest of the news

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Limiting books: The Huntington Beach City Council is limiting children's access to books at the public library that one council member described as "obscene," Voice of OC reports.
  • Hospital executive pay: Los Angeles voters will decide next spring whether to put a $450,000-a-year cap on pay for hospital executives, The Los Angeles Times reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Murder trial: A Fresno man charged with fatally shooting his tenant in a dispute over rent will face trial for murder, The Fresno Bee reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Wage theft: A Sacramento restaurant that was under investigation for wage theft brought in a man who claimed to be a priest to hear workers' confessions. Employees said he asked almost exclusively about work.
  • Sequoias: A prescribed fire in Calaveras State Park may have permanently damaged a pair of historic sequoias estimated to be 500 to 1,000 years old, SFGate reports.

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Senya Lubisich, who lives in San Gabriel in Los Angeles County. Senya recommends La Laguna de San Gabriel playground:

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"Tucked in the back of a municipal park, La Laguna de San Gabriel offers visitors a concrete wonderland of sea creatures. These whimsical structures are the work of the renowned Mexican concrete artist Benjamin Dominguez and have been a treasure in the city of San Gabriel since 1965. They are listed on the National Register of Historic Places and are a delightful place to picnic, to slide down the back of a dragon, and clamber on an octopus. Of course, you can forgo the picnic and enjoy the amazing Chinese food in the city or a pizza at the equally historic Petrillo's pizza!

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

Today at 10 a.m., Christian Cooper and Amy Tan will discuss their shared love of birding in a free live virtual event as part of The New York Times summer birding project. Watch here.

Tell us

We're almost halfway through 2023! What are the best things that have happened to you so far this year? What have been your wins? Or your unexpected joys, big or small?

Tell me at CAToday@nytimes.com. Please include your full name and the city where you live.

Shirley Raines checked Mariana Rangel-Soto's hair before it was bleached by the Beauty 2 the Streetz team on Skid Row in Los Angeles.Alex Welsh for The New York Times

And before you go, some good news

Shirley Raines, 55, provides food, hygienic services and unconditional support to people without a home through her nonprofit in Los Angeles, Beauty 2 the Streetz. To her, they are all "kings" and "queens."

Beauty 2 the Streetz, which became a registered nonprofit in 2019, feeds about 1,000 people a week, mostly on Skid Row. Raines also captures moments that she uploads to her social media accounts in the hopes that she can change the narrative on homelessness — and show others that, as she sees it, these are simply people who were dealt a bad hand.

"Homelessness is one of those very visual problems," said Ben Henwood, director of the Center for Homelessness, Housing and Health Equity Research at the University of Southern California. "We see it all over the place, but actually seeing people for who they are, the humanity part, we often miss. These kinds of efforts that allow people to connect at a very individual level and be seen, I think, are hugely important for self-esteem."

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

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

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