| | | | | | By Adam Wren | | Presented by | | | | With help from Eli Okun, Bethany Irvine, Ali Bianco and Rachel Umansky-Castro On today’s Playbook Podcast: Adam Wren and POLITICO White House and foreign affairs correspondent Eli Stokols discuss what to watch out of today’s big White House meeting, plus what the DNC chair told Adam about the state of the Democratic Party in 2025.
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| Happy Friday. I’m Adam Wren. Get in touch. ABOUT LAST NIGHT: In the New York City mayoral debate last night, which was (expertly) co-moderated by POLITICO’s own Sally Goldenberg, Andrew Cuomo and Curtis Sliwa largely failed to land big swings aimed at Democratic frontrunner Zohran Mamdani, POLITICO’s Nick Reisman and Jeff Coltin write. “Few of those hits had much of an impact against Mamdani, who effectively pressed his affordability platform without making any significant mistakes. Cuomo needed a moment that he didn’t get. Mamdani had a largely pain-free night.” What to know: Nick and Jeff ticked through the five top takeaways from the two-hour debate: (1) Mamdani was smooth, (2) Cuomo’s underdog struggles continue, (3) Sliwa talked up Trump, (4) Cuomo got bogged down explaining himself most of the night and (5) Mamdani’s biggest weaknesses were public safety and Israel. In today’s Playbook … — Ken Martin tells Playbook why he thinks he has the best job in America. — Volodymyr Zelenskyy tells Trump Ukraine needs additional arms. — JB Pritzker tells Dasha that Trump could take his troop deployments to a whole new level.
|  | DRIVING THE DAY | | | 
DNC Chair Ken Martin is projecting confidence that Democrats will win the gubernatorial races in New Jersey and Virginia in November. | Scott Olson/Getty Images | YES, HE KEN — Ken Martin has been almost everywhere since he became the chair of the Democratic National Committee, attempting to put out fires for a party in the wilderness as he has hopscotched some 33 states over the last eight months. Just this week, Martin quietly shuttled from Indianapolis, where Indiana Republicans are weighing mid-cycle redistricting at the demand of President Donald Trump, to Washington for the Supreme Court’s oral arguments of Louisiana v. Callais — which could weaken the Voting Rights Act and further set Democrats back — to Pittsburgh, where he campaigned for the Pennsylvania Supreme Court retention races. “Most people think I’ve got the shittiest job in America, but I feel like I’ve got the best job in America,” Martin said. But it’s New Jersey’s gubernatorial matchup that’s making Martin nervous these days — and where he’s headed this weekend. In a wide-ranging interview while he was in Pittsburgh, Playbook spoke with Martin, who previewed the party’s prospects in the Garden State as well as Virginia ahead of Election Day next month, and dug into his efforts to defend Democratic House seats from Republican-led gerrymandering attempts. “New Jersey is the best place, probably, for Donald Trump to actually stop the Democratic momentum — or at least minimize the Democratic momentum that we’ve seen throughout this year,” Martin told us, pointing to what he cites as his party’s overperformance in nearly four dozen special elections since Trump’s inauguration. “We’ve overperformed on that to the tune of, on average, about 16 percentage points, which is a historic overperformance. And so, you know, they’re looking to blunt our momentum somewhere.” Despite touting his party’s performance under Trump’s second presidency, Martin declined to handicap whether Democratic candidate Mikie Sherrill needed to match or beat former VP Kamala Harris’ 6-point margin over Trump in New Jersey last November. “I don’t care if we overperform or underperform,” Martin added. “What I care about is making sure we win. At the end of the day, we know that the Republicans are feeling very bullish about their chances in New Jersey for a whole host of reasons, right? Jack Ciattarelli lost to Phil Murphy by 3 points four years ago. In the Harris race last year, they significantly shrunk the presidential margin there. And New Jersey has a history of electing Republican governors, combined with the fact that they haven't ever elected a Democrat to a third term, right, at least in the last 50 years.” It’s worth pausing here for a stepback. POLITICO’s Madison Fernandez, who has been covering the race since January, writes in: “Republicans do feel bullish in New Jersey, pointing to Trump’s inroads in the state last year — particularly in areas with large Black and Hispanic populations — and the increase in registered Republicans since Ciattarelli’s 2021 bid for governor, when he lost by an unexpectedly small margin. If Sherrill does pull off a win — which Democrats acknowledge will be challenging — the party will be reading the tea leaves to see how she performed in these areas where Democrats lost ground last year.” FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Our colleague Michael Kruse spent time with Sherrill on the road recently and is up with a must-read for POLITICO Magazine on the state of her campaign, digging into the precarious position that Sherrill finds herself in as Nov. 4 looms. “By the relative rules of politics when she got into the game, Sherrill should be winning this race going away — and she’s not,” Michael writes. “Progressives are calling her ‘milquetoast,’” while “moderates are granting it’s tight.” It’s a far cry from when Sherrill swept into Congress. “I think the sense that I had in 2018 was we just cracked the code — we just figured out how Democrats can win everywhere and be in power — for decades,” Sherrill told Michael. Though “decades,” he notes, turned out to mean four years. “Was she worried the world of 2025 demands a different code — a code she perhaps hasn’t cracked? ‘No,’ she said. ‘Because I just, I know — I know what to do here. I know how to win here. I know how to lead here. And I think that the example we set here could be really powerful in setting the table for the future.’” Martin told Playbook that if the election were held today, “certainly” he thought both Sherrill and Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger “would win handedly, but we’ve got three weeks left.” He had more to say about Democrats’ larger predicament and one of the more controversial Democratic candidates on the ballot next month: - On Democratic redistricting efforts: “Every Democrat that I’ve talked to, including our governors, they all understand how imperative it is that we stand up to this, again, unconstitutional power grab by the Republicans. … Democrats believe in good government, and we believe in fair and free elections, and we believe in putting safeguards in place to prevent exactly what we're seeing around the country. And as a result, in many states, including in states like Illinois and other states that are controlled by Democrats, it's much harder for them to actually do what the Republicans are doing in those Republican-controlled states, and so I don't begrudge anyone for not being able to do it.”
- On Virginia Democratic AG candidate Jay Jones: “Jay Jones made reckless and unacceptable comments, and I think he would agree with that. He has taken responsibility for what he said, and he’s apologized to the former speaker and to Virginians. I believe in free and fair elections, and Virginia voters are the ones that will have to make this decision, and each race is their own, and you know, Virginians will make a final decision on who they want to be their next attorney general. … I believe that most Virginians have accepted that apology and that they'll elect Jay Jones as the next attorney general.” (During an AG debate last night, Jones said he was “ashamed,” “embarrassed” and “sorry” for the text scandal, per POLITICO’s Brakkton Booker.)
Finally, we did a wellness check on Martin, who earlier this year said on a private Zoom recording obtained by POLITICO that “the other night I said to myself for the first time, ‘I don’t know if I wanna do this anymore,’” amid dramatic infighting with David Hogg, which eventually led to Hogg stepping down from his post as DNC vice chair. Even if Martin says he’s doing better since the summer drama, he did not mince words. “There’s not a day that I don’t go home wanting to pull my hair out, because it’s a tough job.” | | | | A message from Evernorth Health Services: Controversy around GLP-1s and how much pharmaceutical companies want Americans to pay for them continues to rise. Which is why we offer a benefit that ensures members pay no more than $200/month out of pocket for certain GLP-1s for weight loss. That's not a middleman. That's an advocate. See how Express Scripts Pharmacy Benefit Services is advocating to make GLP-1s more affordable for millions here. | | | | AMERICA AND THE WORLD MR. Z GOES TO WASHINGTON: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy today is headed to the White House, where he’ll meet with Trump to press for the U.S. to supply additional arms to Ukraine. Zelenskyy is scheduled to arrive at the White House at 1 p.m., then the leaders will duck into a bilateral lunch at 1:15. After the two wrap up, Trump is set to depart the White House at 3 p.m. to decamp to Palm Beach, Florida. On the agenda: The two leaders are sitting down for their fourth face-to-face encounter this year. This time, Zelenskyy is pushing for U.S.-made weapons that will allow Ukraine to strike deeper into Russia — a move which Putin has threatened could fracture the fragile relationship between Trump and the Kremlin, per AP. “Russia will be forced to stop the war once it is no longer able to continue it,” Zelenskyy said in a post on X. The view from the Kremlin: Trump said he held a “very productive” phone call yesterday with Russian President Vladimir Putin, noting on Truth Social that the two leaders agreed to meet in Budapest on a to-be-announced date. Trump also noted that a meeting was on the books for next week between senior officials, with the U.S. delegation led by Secretary of State and national security adviser Marco Rubio. But but but: White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt seemed to hedge on the details of a Trump-Putin confab after the call, POLITICO’s Eli Stokols reports. “While Trump said in his post that he and Putin ‘will meet’ in Budapest, Leavitt later called it a ‘very likely’ meeting.” MIDDLE EAST LATEST: Trump issued a fresh threat to Hamas yesterday as the world watches to see whether the Gaza ceasefire will hold. “If Hamas continues to kill people in Gaza, which was not the Deal, we will have no choice but to go in and kill them,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. Trump later clarified the threat, adding he didn’t mean to refer to U.S forces: “It’s not going to be us,” Trump said. “There are people very close, very nearby that will go in and they’ll do the trick very easily, but under our auspices,” he said, per AP. Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel will “act accordingly” if Hamas doesn’t hold up its end of the deal and release remaining hostages in Gaza, per CNN. HOW IT’S PLAYING: Almost half of U.S. voters now approve of Trump’s handling of the Israel-Hamas war in the days after announcing a ceasefire deal, a 17-point increase from April, according to a new Emerson College Polling national survey released today, POLITICO’s Erin Doherty writes in. The poll found that 47 percent of voters say they approve of Trump’s handling of the conflict, while 34% disapprove. That’s a stark reversal from polling in April, when just 30% of voters approved of Trump’s handling of the war and 46% disapproved. Ukraine on the brain: While Trump touts the Middle East peace deal as a marquee foreign policy achievement, he faces broader disapproval over his handling of the Russia-Ukraine war: 50% of voters disapprove compared to 30% who approve, the poll found. The Emerson College Polling survey of 1,000 registered voters was conducted Oct. 13-14. | | | | A message from Evernorth Health Services: Controversy around GLP-1s and how much pharmaceutical companies want Americans to pay for them continues to rise. Which is why we offer a benefit that ensures members pay no more than $200/month out of pocket for certain GLP-1s for weight loss. That's not a middleman. That's an advocate. See how Express Scripts Pharmacy Benefit Services is advocating to make GLP-1s more affordable for millions here. | | | | MAGA MILITARY FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Pritzker pops off: As Trump continues his push to deploy military personnel into U.S. cities, Democratic leaders in many states are putting their foot down — and few are leading the charge as publicly as Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker. While he may not have been itching for a fight with the White House, Trump’s move to send National Guard troops into Chicago in spite of Pritzker’s objections is raising Pritzker’s profile and rippling out to the political parlor game for the 2028 presidential race. In the interview with Playbook’s own Dasha Burns for this week’s “The Conversation,” Pritzker warned that Trump’s troop deployments could serve as pretext for interfering in the midterm elections. “I think it’s not very far away from him offering and providing the military to protect the polling places across America, but particularly in blue states and blue cities, with the idea that they could confiscate the ballot boxes if they think there is fraud in the election,” Pritzker said. Pritzker also said Trump’s claim that crime is rampant in Chicago is rooted in “lies,” arguing the city has cut its crime rates despite clashing with the administration , POLITICO’s Faith Wardwell writes. As for the state of his own party? “I think we have too many challenges facing the country for Democrats to be criticizing other Democrats,” Pritzker told Dasha. “We know what the problem with this country is right now, and it's what Donald Trump is doing to it. So if there's a unifying force, that certainly is one.” Read the Q&A… Watch the full episode on YouTube … Listen and subscribe COURT IN THE ACT: In a major legal setback for the Trump administration, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals extended an order blocking Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops in Chicago, saying the administration is unable to show that there is an organized rebellion nor that officials are otherwise unable to uphold law and order in the city, POLITICO’s Hassan Ali Kanu writes. The panel wrote that “political opposition is not rebellion,” rejecting claims that the protests posed a serious threat. The panel “also rejected the administration’s argument that federal courts have no power to review a president’s underlying determinations in deciding to federalize troops.” GOING TO CALIFORNIA: California AG Rob Bonta is gearing up to take the Trump administration to court if Trump follows through on threats to deploy the National Guard to San Francisco, POLITICO’s Noah Baustin reports. DEEP IN THE HEART: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is sending the National Guard and state law enforcement to Austin ahead of the nationwide No Kings protest, which Republicans have labeled a radical, anti-American movement, POLITICO’s Gregory Svirnovskiy writes. | | | | As the shutdown fight deepens, stay on top of every twist with POLITICO’s essential newsletters. Inside Congress delivers the reporting and analysis you need on negotiations, votes, and power dynamics driving Washington’s next move. ➡️ Subscribe to Inside Congress West Wing Playbook covers how Trump’s Washington is navigating the shutdown — and what it means for the people running government day to day. ➡️ Subscribe to West Wing Playbook | | | | | BEST OF THE REST INVESTIGATION STATION: Trump’s former national security adviser John Bolton is expected to surrender himself as soon as today following his indictment by a federal grand jury yesterday on 18 counts of mishandling classified information. Prosecutors alleged Bolton “regularly sent more than 1,000 pages of ‘diary-like entries’ to two people ‘related’ to him while he was handling the nation’s most sensitive military, intelligence and diplomatic matters,” POLITICO’s Josh Gerstein and Kyle Cheney report. “Federal prosecutors in Maryland secured the indictment from a grand jury, which met for about three hours to consider the case.” SHUTDOWN SHOWDOWN: The federal government shutdown is barrelling towards its third week with no week in sight and frustrations are mounting on Capitol Hill. Trump has signaled that he will drop a list of “Democrat programs” tabbed to be wiped out today. Last night, Senate Majority Leader John Thune told reporters the White House sounds open to rolling back some of the steps it has taken during the shutdown — if Democrats agree to reopen the government, POLITICO’s Jordain Carney reports. Meanwhile, Speaker Mike Johnson is working to tamp down anxiety of the chamber’s indefinite recess, per POLITICO’s Meredith Lee Hill. Zooming out: Republicans are attempting a tough balancing act on health care policy — regardless of how the shutdown concludes. The debate “has reopened an old wound” for the party, which railed against Obamacare for over a decade, POLITICO’s Benjamin Guggenheim and colleagues report. With Democrats shoving subsidies into the spotlight, “Republican leaders and key senators are acknowledging the political reality that Obamacare, at least for the immediate future, is here to stay.” THE MAINE PROBLEM: Graham Platner, an insurgent Democratic candidate for Senate in Maine, once suggested in online posts that violence is a necessary means to achieving social change — comments now drawing scrutiny in an era of increased political violence,” your author and POLITICO’s Erin Doherty and Jessica Piper report. If people “expect to fight fascism without a good semi-automatic rifle, they ought to do some reading of history,” he wrote in one since-deleted post. In a statement to POLITICO, Platner disavowed the messages’ violent rhetoric. “I made dumb jokes and picked fights. But of course I’m not a socialist. I’m a small business owner, a Marine Corps veteran, and a retired shitposter.” FOR YOUR RADAR: Trump unveiled new policy measures yesterday to increase access to in vitro fertilization, including “one to lower the cost of a drug commonly prescribed to women going through the process and another to boost employer coverage of the expensive procedure,” POLITICO’s Lauren Gardner and colleagues report. Despite Trump’s campaign promises to expand access to fertility care, the details around the rollout of the policies remain murky. And the new measures include “no new funding for patients or providers and no mandates that insurers cover the procedures, which can cost up to $20,000 for a single cycle.” HMMM: Rep. Dave Taylor (R-Ohio) claimed that a swastika-marked American flag seen in his Capitol Hill office was part of a coordinated hoax targeting GOP offices, per POLITICO’s Samuel Benson. “Numerous Republican offices have confirmed that they were targeted by an unidentified group or individual who distributed American flags bearing a similar symbol, which were initially indistinguishable from an ordinary American flag to the naked eye.” KNIVES OUT FOR STEYER: Tom Steyer has infuriated Democrats in California after parachuting into the redistricting race to tout Gov. Gavin Newsom’s measure to redraw the maps — but there was no coordination with Newsom’s campaign team, POLITICO's Melanie Mason and Jeremy White report. “We’re not sure why he’s so obsessed with promoting himself,” one lawmaker said. “This is bigger than him. This is about democracy.” | | | | A message from Evernorth Health Services:  | | | | THE WEEKEND AHEAD TV TONIGHT … C-SPAN “Ceasefire”: Maryland Gov. Wes Moore and Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt. PBS “Washington Week”: Anne Applebaum, Stephen Hayes, Tyler Pager and Nancy Youssef. SUNDAY SO FAR … POLITICO “The Conversation”: Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker … Jacqui Heinrich. Fox News “Sunday Morning Futures” President Donald Trump. NBC “Meet the Press”: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy … Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) … Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.). Panel: Sara Fagen, Carol Lee, Susan Page and Neera Tanden. ABC “This Week”: Sen. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.). Panel: Donna Brazile, Reince Priebus, Sarah Isgur and Leigh Ann Caldwell. CNN “State of the Union”: Panel: Faiz Shakir, Chris Sununu, Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-N.Y.). CBS “Face the Nation”: Mohammad Mustafa … Christine Lagarde … Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.). Panel: University professors will join to discuss higher education issues. FOX “Fox News Sunday”: Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) … Jack Ciattarelli … Grace and Bill Drexel. Panel: Josh Holmes, Stef Kight, Kevin Roberts and Juan Williams. MSNBC “The Weekend: Primetime”: Rep. Kevin Kiley (R-Calif.) … Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) … Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.). NewsNation “The Hill Sunday”: Rep. Suzan DelBene (D-Wash.) … Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.) … Chris Sununu. Panel: George Will, Julie Mason, Sarah McCammon and Tal Kopan. | | | | POLITICO’s Global Security briefing connects the policies, deals, and industrial shifts shaping the global defense landscape. From Washington to Brussels, we follow who’s funding what, what’s being built, and how power moves across continents. Subscribe now for the free preview. | | | | | |  | TALK OF THE TOWN | | OUT AND ABOUT — Corks were popping at the British Ambassador's residence last night, where financial world big-hitters gathered for champagne and fish and chips to close out the IMF's annual meeting. The speech of the night came via the quietly spoken Tim Adams, the veteran George W. Bush Treasury official who now heads up the Institute of International Finance. Adams, who also worked in George H.W. Bush’s White House, told the crowd he'd planned to speak about Jane Austen, given it's the 250th anniversary of her birth, but that “recent events” had convinced him to celebrate alternative British figures. Instead, Adams paid pointed tribute to Edward Jenner, the 18th century English physician who discovered the smallpox vaccine, and Alexander Fleming, the Scottish scientist who discovered penicillin — noting that through rigorous scientific method, these two men had saved upward of one billion lives. He contrasted their record with the notorious postwar Soviet official Trofim Lysenko, who “chose dogma and politics” over proven science and caused the deaths of millions of people. No mention was made of the current political climate … yet somehow the message seemed to resonate with those present. SPOTTED: British Chargé d'Affaires James Roscoe, U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves, Rep. Bryan Steil (R-Wis.), Paul Atkins, Stephen Miran, Andrew Bailey, Derek Theurer, Emory Cox, Nicholas Tabor, Tyler Williams, Luke Pettit, Rebecca Karabus, S.P. Kothari, Johnathon Hurowitz, Tim Adams, David Schwimmer, Robin Vince, Tal Cohen, Jose Vinals, Baroness Shriti Vadera, Martin Gilbert, Maria Ramos, Sandro Ro, Peggy Collins, Jack Blanchard, Victoria Guida, Greg Ip, Kirsty McVicar and Nick Alton. — Evan Ryan, Tony Blinken, Afsaneh and Michael Beschloss, hosted a book party on Tuesday night for Darren Walker’s new book,”The Idea of America” ($30). SPOTTED: Sens. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Ed Markey (D-Mass.), Susan Blumenthal, Alejandro and Tanya Mayorkas, Bob Woodward, Sally Quinn, Josh Harris, Frank McCourt, Jean and Steve Case, David Ignatius, John Harris, Norah O’Donnell, Maureen Dowd, Kathleen Kennedy, Stuart and Gwen Holliday, Capricia and Rob Marshall, Nicole Elkon, Suzy George, Juleanna Glover, Melissa Moss and Jonathan Silver, Frank Foer and Abby Greensfelder, Peggy Hamburg and Megan and Michael Ortiz. FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Rodney Gibbs will be executive director at Heartland Signal. He previously worked at the National Trust for Local News and is a Texas Tribune and Atlanta Journal-Constitution alum. TRANSITION — Trace Scruggs is joining The Herald Group as a vice president. He previously worked at PLUS Communications. WEDDING — Aaron White, comms director for Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.), and Eric Ahlstrand, director of enrollment analytics at Dartmouth College, got married on Sunday at the George Peabody Library in Baltimore, Maryland. SPOTTED: Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.), Natasha Dabrowski and Josh Fendrick, Jake Abbott, Keanu Rivera and Bo Morris, Noah Whitford, Reynolds and Nicholas Hutchins, Blakely Jarrett and Josh Wentzel, Ali Golden, Lindsey Wagner-Oveson, Josh Marcus Blank, John LaBombard, Austin Laufersweiler, Kyle Tharp, Baillee Brown, Marguerite Biagi, Julia O’Connor, Martha Spieker, Sarah Paden, Hana Greenberg, Sean Dugan and Matt Moore.. Pic via Brittany Dunbar … Another pic HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) … Rep. Mike Quigley (D-Ill.) … Bloomberg’s Angela Greiling Keane … Reuters’ Bo Erickson … POLITICO’s Myah Ward and Amanda Britton … Kelly Misselwitz of Rep. Ilhan Omar’s (D-Minn.) office … TikTok’s Michael Beckerman … Commercial Space Federation’s Alicia Brown … Rich Thomas of Monument Advocacy … KFF Health News’ Julie Rovner … Martin Matishak … Ken Baer of Crosscut Strategies … John Monsif … former Reps. Gene Green (D-Texas), Virgil Goode (R-Va.) and Cheri Bustos (D-Ill.) … Bill Steiger … Aspen Institute’s Josh Good … Versant’s Hartley Messer … Tia O’Malley of Ridgeline Advocacy Group … Katie Peterson of Merchant McIntyre Associates … Trident GMG’s Adrienne Petz … Diana Hamilton … former North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory … Peter Grauer … CNN’s Caroline Klein … Morgan O’Brien Did someone forward this email to you? Sign up here. Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com or text us on Signal here. Playbook couldn’t happen without our deputy editor Garrett Ross and Playbook Podcast producer Callan Tansill-Suddath. | | | | A message from Evernorth Health Services: Lowering costs. Improving patient access. Supporting long-term health. Express Scripts Pharmacy Benefit Services is making it all possible through better GLP-1 benefits. Benefits delivering better care for millions by ensuring members pay no more than $200/month out of pocket for certain GLP-1s for weight loss. And it's not just their patients who are benefiting from this first-of-its-kind offer. They're helping to lower costs for health plans, unions, government agencies, public sector organizations, and more. Savings that allow them to expand access to more patients without breaking their budgets. That's not a middleman. That's an advocate. See how Express Scripts Pharmacy Benefit Services is advocating to make GLP-1s more affordable for millions here. | | | | | | | | Follow us on X | | | | Subscribe to the POLITICO Playbook family Playbook | Playbook PM | California Playbook | Florida Playbook | Illinois Playbook | Massachusetts Playbook | New Jersey Playbook | New York Playbook | Canada Playbook | Brussels Playbook | London Playbook View all our political and policy newsletters | | Follow us | | | |
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