Gaetz keeps his powder dry, for now

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Oct 02, 2023 View in browser
 
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By Eli Okun

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Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) speaks with reporters as he departs the U.S. Capitol after making a floor speech in the House chamber Oct 2. 2023, 2023. (Francis Chung/POLITICO via AP Images)

Rep. Matt Gaetz certainly thinks a Ukraine side deal exists between Democrats and Speaker Kevin McCarthy. | Francis Chung/POLITICO via AP Images

ALL EYES ON GAETZ — Rep. MATT GAETZ (R-Fla.) hasn’t yet triggered a vote on a motion to vacate KEVIN McCARTHY’s speakership, but he rose on the floor this afternoon to dangle the prospect of it happening later this week.

The outcome, he indicated, could hinge on the answer to one question: “What was the secret side deal on Ukraine?” It isn’t clear whether McCarthy and Democrats actually have a deal to strip Ukraine aid out of this weekend’s continuing resolution in exchange for a separate vote. But Gaetz certainly thinks it exists — and he pummeled McCarthy for violating multiple terms of the agreement he struck with far-right holdouts to become speaker in January. He told reporters afterward that he held off on the MTV today because members were still flying back to D.C.

“For all the crocodile tears about what may happen later this week about a motion to vacate, working with the Democrats is a yellow brick road that has been paved by Speaker McCarthy,” Gaetz warned.

And he made sure to undercut Republicans’ core reelection argument against President JOE BIDEN, too: “It is going to be difficult for my Republican friends to keep calling President Biden feeble while he continues to take Speaker McCarthy’s lunch money in every negotiation.”

Gaetz won’t be able to count on Rep. MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE (R-Ga.). She indicated in a lengthy thread on X today that she’ll oppose a motion to vacate, just as she’d oppose an effort to expel Gaetz: “The American people are relying on Republicans to get our acts together.”

As the House waits for Gaetz to make his move, the other big question is whether Democrats would join with McCarthy to save him. Asked by CNN’s Manu Raju whether he’d cut a deal with Dems, McCarthy responded opaquely: “Look, I think this is about the institution. I think it’s too important.”

The speaker also told reporters that the fate of the remaining appropriations bills is uncertain, as he doesn’t know if he has the votes to pass them this week.

Meanwhile, with the fate of Ukraine aid up in the air, Biden is planning to convene allies by phone as soon as tomorrow to reassure them that the U.S. is still committed to the war effort, Bloomberg’s Alberto Nardelli, Jenny Leonard, Jennifer Jacobs, and Alex Wickham scoop.

TRUMP ON TRIAL — Today began a new era for DONALD TRUMP and the country he seeks to lead: his time in the courtroom. The official start of the civil business fraud case against him, brought by New York AG TISH JAMES, kicks off a season of legal reckonings that will play out across several states in the months and years to come.

On his way into court, Trump called the suit a “scam.” And he made clear (without any evidence) that he sees all the cases against him as a combined conspiracy aimed at taking him down: “This is a continuation of the single greatest witch hunt of all time,” he told reporters.

James, on her way in, made the kind of comment we’re likely to hear from plenty of prosecutors: “No matter how powerful you are, and no matter how much money you think you have, no one is above the law.”

Inside the courtroom, Judge ARTHUR ENGORON revealed that the reason he has sole domain over the course’s outcome is because “nobody asked for” a jury trial, per The Messenger’s Adam Klasfeld. He already issued a summary judgment last week finding that the Trump Organization committed significant fraud. Engoron today also rejected journalists’ request to have a camera in the courtroom for opening statements.

During opening statements, Trump attorney ALINA HABBA decried James’ prosecution as politically motivated, earning a reminder from Engoron that he’d already rejected arguments along those lines. Trump’s lawyers also argued that the company’s maneuvers were standard practice for the real estate industry, with no ill intent. Prosecutors, on the flip side, alleged “ample evidence of intent” to deceive. Live updates from WaPo

Good Monday afternoon, and thanks for reading Playbook PM. Drop me a line at eokun@politico.com.

 

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AND THE AWARD GOES TO — KATALIN KARIKÓ and DREW WEISSMAN today received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for research that laid the groundwork for the revolutionary mRNA Covid-19 vaccines. Their critical breakthroughs to create mRNA technology have transformed vaccine development and tools to fight cancer — and they saved an estimated tens of millions of lives during the Covid pandemic. More from the NYT

CONGRESS

SPARTZ PLUG — Rep. VICTORIA SPARTZ (R-Ind.), one of the less predictable members of Congress, today threatened to resign if lawmakers don’t take serious action to reduce the national debt this year. “[T]here is a limitation to human capacity,” she said in a statement urging the creation of a debt commission. “I will not continue sacrificing my children for this circus with a complete absence of leadership, vision, and spine. I cannot save this Republic alone.

TRIAL BY FIRE — Rep. JAMAAL BOWMAN’s (D-N.Y.) move to pull the fire alarm in the Capitol this weekend remains a source of uncertainty: He says it was an honest mistake, while Republicans see it as a devious delay tactic. Sources close to Bowman tell Jeff Coltin, Emily Ngo and Nick Reisman for New York Playbook that “he was embarrassed by the confusion and was cooperating with investigators. And that Republicans frothing at the mouth should release the security video, not just a still.” But back home, the incident is stirring talk of a primary challenge from Westchester County Executive GEORGE LATIMER, whom AIPAC has encouraged to run against the more progressive Bowman.

 

GROWING IN THE GOLDEN STATE: POLITICO California is growing, reinforcing our role as the indispensable insider source for reporting on politics, policy and power. From the corridors of power in Sacramento and Los Angeles to the players and innovation hubs in Silicon Valley, we're your go-to for navigating the political landscape across the state. Exclusive scoops, essential daily newsletters, unmatched policy reporting and insights — POLITICO California is your key to unlocking Golden State politics. LEARN MORE.

 
 

JUDICIARY SQUARE

SCOTUS WATCH — The Supreme Court turned down JOHN EASTMAN’s attempt to wipe out lower-court rulings “that found Eastman’s emails contained evidence of a likely crime related to Trump’s efforts” to overturn the 2020 election, Josh Gerstein and Kyle Cheney report. Notably, Justice CLARENCE THOMAS recused himself from the matter.

— The court today allowed NYC’s rent control regulations to stand, turning down a challenge from landlords who said the limits “amount to an unconstitutional government taking of landlords’ property,” NYT’s Adam Liptak reports.

— A significant case this term examines whether the SACKLER family’s bankruptcy settlement, which forces them to pay $6 billion over the opioid crisis but protects them from other civil suits, should be allowed to stand, USA Today’s John Fritze previews. The question has divided families of opioid overdose victims: Most see the payout as a positive step to save lives, but others think the Sacklers and Purdue Pharma are getting off too easy. The high court will have to decide whether federal bankruptcy courts can legitimately include lawsuit shields in such an agreement.

AFTERNOON READ — The New Yorker’s David Fitzpatrick goes deep on Alliance Defending Freedom, the rising conservative Christian legal group that has helped overturn Roe v. Wade and carve out legal protections for wedding vendors to refuse same-sex couples. Having moved from the legal fringe to the center of the legal right, ADF is growing, increasingly going on offense and even considering broadening its remit beyond religious concerns.

Among its next culture-war targets: abortion pills and transgender rights. Chief executive KRISTEN WAGGONER, who’s led a successful strategy “to pick smarter battles, including in the court of public opinion,” also has her eye on SCOTUS establishing constitutional “parental rights.”

 

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ALL POLITICS

BATTLE FOR THE HOUSE — Republican HOLLIE NOVELETSKY is jumping into the race to challenge Rep. CHRIS PAPPAS (D-N.H.), WMUR-TV’s Adam Sexton scoops. The CEO of a steel company in Greenland, N.H., and a nurse/disaster relief volunteer, Noveletsky will take on former Executive Councilor RUSSELL PRESCOTT in the primary.

CASH DASH — Rep. ADAM SCHIFF’s (D-Calif.) Senate campaign pulled in a whopping $6.4 million in the third quarter, NBC’s Sahil Kapur scoops. He went into the fourth quarter with $32 million on hand.

— SUE LAMBERT, a Democrat running in a swing New Jersey congressional district, announced that she raised $283,000 in the third quarter.

DOWN BALLOT — The Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee announced that it has now pumped more than $2 million into the Virginia state legislative races this year, including more than $1 million in just the past two weeks.

BATTLE FOR THE STATES — Mississippi Gov. TATE REEVES and Kentucky AG DANIEL CAMERON are working hard to tie their Democratic opponents to Biden in two of the year’s big gubernatorial races, AP’s Bruce Schreiner and Emily Wagster Pettus report. The messaging aims to juice Republican turnout and nationalize the contests, in addition to functioning as a test drive of how such narratives might play across the country next year. But “[i]n each state, the Democrat has a previously existing brand that could help distinguish them from the Republican effort to define them as Biden allies.”

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

FOR YOUR RADAR — “Lawsuit Says NH Guv’s Family May Profit Off Humanitarian Crisis,” by The Daily Beast’s William Bredderman: “A lawsuit filed in July describes how … the Sununu family — led by patriarch JOHN SUNUNU, the former New Hampshire governor and ex-White House chief-of-staff — held stakes and positions in a U.K.-based firm that secured mining rights within the province [of Nagorno-Karabakh] from Baku, rights only an Azerbaijani reconquest could guarantee.”

POLICY CORNER

NEW IDEA — “U.S. health officials propose using a cheap antibiotic as a ‘morning-after pill’ against STDs,” by AP’s Mike Stobbe

 

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PLAYBOOKERS

MEDIA MOVE — Scott Vance has been named a managing editor at WaPo, in charge of international, business and sports. He most recently has been a deputy managing editor.

TRANSITIONS — Kelvin Chen is now senior EVP and head of policy at the Consumer Bankers Association. He previously led Barclays U.S. Consumer Bank’s regulatory affairs function. … Juliette Boberg is joining the League of Women Voters as director of corporate and organizational partnerships. She previously was senior director at Impactual. … Harry Kazianis has rejoined the Center for the National Interest as senior director of national security affairs and executive editor of The National Interest. He previously was a political consultant and president of the Rogue States Project.

WEDDINGS — Larry Handerhan, chief of staff at HHS’ Administration for Children and Families, and Donnelly McDowell, partner at Kelley Drye & Warren, got married Saturday on Martha’s Vineyard. White Ford Bronco played at their reception, and they served beer from Right Proper, where they had their first date during the early pandemic.PicAnother pic

— Marshall Kosloff, host of “The Realignment” podcast at the Foundation for American Innovation, a media fellow at Hudson Institute and a fellow at the Clements Center for National Security at UT Austin, and Olivia Webb, editorial lead at a16z Bio + Health, got married in a Jewish ceremony Aug. 27 in D.C. and a secular ceremony Sept. 16 in their new hometown of Austin. They met in July 2016 at a party in D.C. but only started dating in 2018.PicAnother pic

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Kevin Perez-Allen, chief comms officer at United States of Care, and Rachel Perez-Allen, director of ag and nutrition government affairs at Feeding America, welcomed Eliana Paloma Perez-Allen on Friday — the same birthday as her dad. She joins big sister Lucia Alicia. Pic

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California Today: South Asians in California are divided over a pending ban on caste discrimination

Some say a bill awaiting Gov. Gavin Newsom's signature that would forbid caste-based bias is badly needed, while others say it unfairly singles out Hindus for legal exposure.

It's Monday. Not everyone thinks a bill awaiting Governor Newsom's signature that would ban caste-based discrimination is a helpful step. Plus, Laphonza Butler is the governor's choice for the state's vacant U.S. Senate seat.

Supporters of Senate Bill 403, which would ban caste-based discrimination, outside the State Assembly in Sacramento in August.Mike Kai Chen for The New York Times

Caste.

It's an ancient system of social stratification that emerged in India thousands of years ago.

It is also a term that has driven intense debate — and divisions — within the growing South Asian community in California recently, especially in Silicon Valley, where South Asians comprise a significant share of the work force.

On Thursday, Fresno officially became the first city in California, and the second in the country, to enact a ban on discrimination based on caste. Seattle passed a similar ordinance earlier this year.

And any day now, Gov. Gavin Newsom could sign a bill on his desk that would make California the first state in the nation to explicitly ban caste discrimination. The governor has until Oct. 14 to sign or veto the bill, known as Senate Bill 403.

"We need this bill," Nirmal Singh, 42, an Indian American doctor from Bakersfield, Calif., told me in a recent interview. Mr. Singh is one of a group of South Asian activists who have been on a hunger strike outside Governor Newsom's office since early September.

During a reporting trip in the Bay Area last month, I spoke with more than a dozen people who, like Mr. Singh, identify as Dalits, a historically oppressed community who are considered not just lower caste, but outcaste — what used to be called untouchable. Many of them told me about encounters they had with caste-based bigotry in the United States, in the forms of wage theft, housing discrimination, mistreatment in the workplace or social exclusion. They said that explicitly defining caste in state law will give people like them reassurance to come forward with their stories.

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But the bill has also met with fierce opposition. Some South Asian Americans say that the proposal unfairly targets Hindus, because the caste system is most commonly associated with Hinduism. They also say that existing laws prohibiting discrimination on the basis of religion and ancestry are sufficient, and they point out that caste discrimination was outlawed in India more than 70 years ago.

Praveen Sinha, a professor of accounting at California State University, Long Beach, filed a lawsuit last year challenging the university system's addition of caste to its discrimination policy. Mr. Sinha told me that he was concerned that the addition would make South Asians like him more vulnerable to unfair accusations of discrimination.

"I don't want to be having this sword hanging over my head," he said.

For decades, the South Asian diaspora was composed mainly of upper caste people, in part because they had greater access to the resources necessary to qualify for skilled worker visas. More recently, though, affirmative action policies in India have allowed more people from oppressed communities to attend universities and move abroad.

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The issue burst into the public conversation in 2020 when California's Civil Rights Department sued Cisco Systems, accusing two of the company's engineers of caste discrimination. The state dropped its case against the two managers at the heart of the Cisco matter earlier this year but is still suing the company.

The lawsuit was initially filed just after the death of George Floyd set off a national conversation about systemic discrimination. Awareness of caste discrimination has grown since then, and several universities and companies have added caste to their discrimination policies.

"The more diverse California becomes, the more diverse our laws have to be, and the further we have to go to protect more people," Aisha Wahab, a Democratic state senator who introduced the bill, told me in an interview.

Gain unlimited access to The Times — with just one subscription. Independent reporting. Recipes. Games. Product reviews. Personalized sports journalism. Enjoy it all with an introductory offer.

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Laphonza Butler has been a fixture in California politics for nearly 15 years as a former leader of the state's largest labor union and an adviser to Vice President Kamala Harris.Susan Walsh/Associated Press

The rest of the news

Southern California

  • Duncan Crabtree-Ireland, the executive director and chief negotiator for SAG-AFTRA, the striking actors' union, will be a key player as talks with the movie studios resume today.
  • Los Angeles received its 20th busload of migrants from Texas, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • The state's new zero-bail policy has taken effect in Los Angeles County, allowing judges to cite and release certain criminal suspects who would have been held on bond before, KTLA reports.

Central California

  • More Central San Joaquin Valley residents plan to sue local and state agencies who they say failed to prevent flooding that devastated their community, The Fresno Bee reports.
  • Creditors claim that more than $500 million is owed to them by Bitwise Industries, a Fresno company in bankruptcy protection, The Fresno Bee reports.

Northern California

  • San Francisco leaders say the city would look very different if Dianne Feinstein had never been elected mayor.
Bernard Friel/Education Images, via Universal Images Group, via Getty Images

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Dan Kelly, who lives in San Francisco:

"I'm just back from camping with my grandchildren at Lava Beds National Monument, in far Northern California. This park, on the edge of the Medicine Lake Volcano, has scores of lava tube caves to explore, ranging in difficulty from easy walks to full-on spelunker adventures. Each cave provides access to a subterranean world that is unknown to most of us and each has unique features of surprising variety. The park provides guidance and lanterns at the main visitor center.

This region was the Modoc homeland for thousands of years and besides ample interpretive signage, the park includes an amazing, petroglyph-covered cliff, along the former south shore of Tule Lake.

Outside of the caves, the rugged lava fields were the location of one of the last Indian Wars and so there are battle sites and historical markers, which provide background about Modoc history and culture, as well as unvarnished accounts of the conflict.

Finally, the Tule Lake Internment Camp, which held up to 15,000 Japanese American prisoners during World War II, was located here, and an interpretive center provides thoughtful reflection on that episode.

This has been among our family's favorite destinations for almost 50 years, and unlike other, better known parks in California, it is never crowded and reservations are not needed. Other nearby sites that can be combined with a trip to Lava beds include the adjacent Klamath wetlands, which host huge seasonal flocks of migratory birds and the three stratovolcanoes: Mount Shasta, Mount Lassen and Crater Lake, marking the southern end of the West Coast chain of active volcanoes. Each is within a few hours' drive, and each provides a different view of the dynamic geology of this very special region."

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

Our California playlist is ever evolving, based on your recommendations of songs that best represent the Golden State.

You can email me your picks at CAtoday@nytimes.com. Please include your full name, the city where you live as well as a few sentences about why your song deserves inclusion.

Satellite images of Southern California show development of more autumn foliage. NASA MODIS / Maxar Technologies

And before you go, some good news

August showers brought September flowers, and now Southern California is seeing its greenest and lushest autumn in years, The Los Angeles Times reports.

The region, whose landscape typically dries out in the summer months, saw an unusually rainy August this year. Tropical Storm Hilary dropped 2.5 inches of rain on downtown Los Angeles and 1.8 inches in San Diego, claiming the record for the area's wettest August day.

Though the storm caused damage and flooding, it also had positive environmental effects. New satellite photos from NASA show a verdant Southern California landscape, with abundant greenery visible from the Central Valley to the Los Angeles Basin and along the coast. Scars of wildfires and dried-out terrain that was visible in earlier years' satellite photos have shrunk significantly in the new images.

Thanks for reading. We'll be back tomorrow.

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

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