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Sunday, October 24, 2021

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Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Fox News Halftime Report -- Dems belatedly air their dirty laundry

Fox News Halftime Report

Feb. 26, 2020
By Chris Stirewalt


On the roster: Dems belatedly air their dirty laundry - Trump tries to limit political damage from virus spread - Biden holds on to strong lead in South Carolina - Schumer pushing Bullock towards Montana Senate run - Whatchu lookin at?

DEMS BELATEDLY AIR THEIR DIRTY LAUNDRY

It would be unfair to say that the Democratic debaters in Charleston, S.C. offered no policy specifics or vision.

But it would be quite fair to say the affair had all the statesmanlike consideration of a tipped-over outhouse.

Childishly waving their hands in the air for the attention of the utterly outmatched moderators, the seven candidates were so eager to attack each other that they sometimes forgot which zingers they were deploying against whom. Ordnance was detonating all over the stage.

The overall narrative — aside from resentment-fueled pandemonium — was of front-runner Bernie Sanders, with the help of his wing-woman, Elizabeth Warren, deflecting or just ignoring the questions and allegations presented to him.

Even if it wasn't a sustained barrage, this was the first time Sanders got the front-runner treatment. Politicians who for months tried to patronize Sanders and his supporters got serious about the fact that the elderly radical guy from Vermont was cleaning their clocks.

But it is long past time for Democrats to get a little dirtied up. They just finished a long, costly and mostly phony pre-primary. Two dozen hopefuls bared their teeth and sang eight bars of "Happy Days Are Here Again" for political reporters and a number of obliging Iowans to check and re-check.

Reporters wrote enough pointless think pieces that you could wallpaper a caucus gymnasium. Do tell: What is the hot scoop on Julian Castro in Ottumwa? How are divorced Swedes who drive classic Chevelles responding to Beto O'Rourke's wealth tax? Will Bill de Blasio's height hurt him with low-ceilinged voters?

There were articles and television segments about which candidates were getting too few or too many articles and television segments. The buzz about the buzz about the buzz. Talk about a self-licking ice cream cone.

Then finally — finally! — in June, it was time for debates. Start the fanfare!
 
But the celebration was brief, indeed. The Democratic National Committee asserted an unusual degree of control over the debate process this cycle – far more than either party did four years ago. Committee members demanded less-challenging debates and a more-favorable schedule. They were still obsessing over recriminations about the Wiki-leaked, boring, stretch run between Hillary Clinton and Sanders in 2016.

There would be justice for BernieBros (or maybe just vengeance) in lots of rule changes that have made life worse for Democrats. Those changes were to be counterbalanced by those intended to protect the presumed establishment front-runner. (lolz)

The result was having opinion show hosts asking questions that were either absolute softballs or pokey sticks to move moderates further left. If you let Rachel MaddowAnderson CooperDon Lemon et. al. question your candidates from an ideological prospective, you're going to help more intensely ideological candidates. Warren practically rode in a sedan chair.

A couple of the outlets who got debates — PBS and ABC News — did the right thing and offered a straight-news product. These contests helped break up the glacier a bit, but the cockamamie qualification criteria kept the field artificially large.

There was no excuse for having seven candidates on that stage Tuesday. With two contests done and the race moving onto its final phase next week, how is a 10-percent threshold not appropriate? At least 5 percent, people.

While it is certainly true that CBS' moderators on Tuesday did a dire job of enforcing the rules – save for an impressive performance by Margaret Brennan – what the donnybrook viewer saw on stage was inevitable in this sort of process.

There are many ways in which Democrats screwed up their nominating process this time around, including front-loading their primary calendar, but no failure has been greater than denying their voters the chance to see their candidates hash out their differences in a meaningful way at some point before this.

We do not know what effect the fight will have on the shape of the race. Certainly mainstreamers Joe Biden, Mike Bloomberg and Pete Buttigieg had good or improved performances. Certainly, Bernie seemed less like your lovably leftist college professor and more like the petitioner shouting at you from outside the grocery store. But the point is, Democrats should have been airing their stinkables a lot sooner than one week before Super Tuesday.

THE RULEBOOK: SPEAK OUT!
"Let the point of extreme depression to which our national dignity and credit have sunk, let the inconveniences felt everywhere from a lax and ill administration of government, let the revolt of a part of the State of North Carolina, the late menacing disturbances in Pennsylvania, and the actual insurrections and rebellions in Massachusetts, declare--!" – Alexander Hamilton, Federalist No. 6

TIME OUT: CHEERS TO CANNED COCKTAILS
Garden & Gun: "'Lots of people think this is the sample size,' laughs Yoni Reisman, co-founder of Tip Top Proper Cocktails. But the Atlanta-based company's petite (seriously—at 100 ml., or about 3.3 oz., you could conceivably take them on a plane) canned drinks pack a punch. Tip Top's Old Fashioneds, Manhattans, and Negronis range from 52 to 74 proof. They're on the leading edge of the move toward lower-volume, higher-proof canned cocktails among the many bubbly, sweet options that have flooded the ready-to-drink marketplace. Reisman and his business partner Neal Cohen, both music-festival veterans, knew that developing serious canned cocktails called for seriously tasty recipes, so they partnered with expert mixologist (and previous G&G Made in the South Awards judge) Miles Macquarrie. … Because the high proof level would corrode a traditional aluminum can, Tip Top's drinks are instead canned in steel at a facility in North Charleston, South Carolina."

Flag on the play? - Email us at HALFTIMEREPORT@FOXNEWS.COM with your tips, comments or questions.

SCOREBOARD
ESTIMATED DELEGATES FOR DEMOCRATIC NOMINATION
Sanders: 45
Buttigieg: 25
Biden: 15
Warren: 8
Klobuchar: 7
[Ed. note: 1,991 delegates needed to win]

TRUMP JOB PERFORMANCE 
Average approval: 46 percent
Average disapproval: 50.4 percent
Net Score: -4.4 percent
Change from one week ago: ↑ 2.2 points
[Average includes: Gallup: 49% approve - 48% disapprove; ABC News/WaPo: 46% approve - 52% disapprove; NBC News/WSJ: 47% approve - 50% disapprove; NPR/PBS/Marist: 44% approve - 51% disapprove; Monmouth University: 44% approve - 51% disapprove.]

WANT MORE HALFTIME REPORT? 
You can join Chris and Brianna every day on Fox Nation. Go behind-the-scenes of your favorite political note as they go through the must-read headlines of the day right from their office – with plenty of personality. Click here to sign up and watch!

TRUMP TRIES TO LIMIT POLITICAL DAMAGE FROM VIRUS SPREAD
U.S. News & World: "President Donald Trump will hold a press conference Wednesday evening to address the growing concerns surrounding the coronavirus in the U.S. The president tweeted that the press conference will take place at 6 p.m. and representatives from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 'and others,' will be in attendance. Trump tweeted shortly before his announcement that the 'low ratings fake news' is 'doing everything possible to make the coronavirus look as bad as possible, including panicking markets.' However, he insisted that the U.S. is in 'great shape.' On Tuesday, Trump said the CDC and his administration were doing a 'great job of handling coronavirus,' which included closing borders to certain areas of the world. He called out Democrats, claiming they said it was 'too soon' to make such a call, but that it was ultimately the correct decision. The CDC warned Americans on Tuesday that it is all but certain the novel virus, which has infected more than 80,000 people and killed about 2,700 worldwide, will spread throughout the country. The agency advised people to begin taking measures aimed at containing the potentially deadly virus."

Schumer requests more federal funding - WashEx: "Senate Democrats plan to seek $8.5 billion in new federal funding to battle the coronavirus outbreak after condemning President Trump's $2.5 billion request as inadequate. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer 'is preparing a detailed Senate request' for the money, a top aide told the Washington Examiner. … Congress is preparing to take up the supplemental spending measure soon, but the final number will have to be negotiated between Democrats and Republicans in both chambers. The House, run by Democrats, has not yet proposed a spending figure and is likely to take up the legislation first, as is customary. Senate Republicans on Tuesday agreed with Democrats that Trump's request may be too low."

BIDEN HOLDS ON TO STRONG LEAD IN SOUTH CAROLINA
The Greenville [S.C.] News: "Former Vice President Joe Biden has a sizable lead in the South Carolina Democratic presidential primary, according to results of Clemson University's Palmetto Poll released Wednesday morning. Biden received support from 35% of the poll's respondents, said Clemson University political science professor Bruce Ransom. Tom Steyer was a distant second with 17%, and U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont was third with 13%. U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Pete Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, each had 8%. U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota had 4% and U.S. Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii had 2%. The Palmetto Poll, which Clemson has conducted since 1999, shows Biden with a larger lead in South Carolina than several other recent polls. … The former vice president needs a victory in the state's First-in-the-South primary after lackluster showings in the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary and a second-place finish in last Saturday's Nevada caucuses."

Biden gets big endorsement from Rep. Clyburn - AP: "U.S. Rep. Jim Clyburn, the highest-ranking black member of Congress and the kingmaker of South Carolina's Democratic political orbit, on Wednesday endorsed Joe Biden's presidential campaign. The backing could provide a much-needed boost for the former vice president heading into South Carolina's primary. 'I can think of no one better suited, better prepared, I can think of no one with the integrity, no one more committed to the fundamental principles that make this country what it is than my good friend,' said Clyburn, appearing with Biden at an event in North Charleston. He called on the people of South Carolina to 'stand with' Biden. It had long been expected that Clyburn, the House majority whip, would support Biden. The men were in Congress together for more than a decade, with Clyburn also working closely with the Obama administration in his House leadership roles. Biden was among the presidential hopefuls and other political notables who attended two days of funeral and homegoing services last year for Clyburn's wife, Emily."

Trump super PAC prepares post-Super Tuesday blitz - Axios: "Pro-Trump super PAC America First Action is preparing to unleash a series of targeted, swing-state attacks on the Democrat most likely to face President Trump after Super Tuesday, people familiar with the group's plans tell me in an exclusive preview of its strategy. The group has been tracking favorable/unfavorable ratings in Florida, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio and Pennsylvania for 2020 candidates Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Pete Buttigieg and Michael Bloomberg — under the theory that if Trump wins each of these six states he would win re-election. The spending isn't expected to begin until it's clear who the Democratic nominee will be, whether that's after next week's Super Tuesday or in July at the Democratic National Convention."

WSJ: New vote rules may complicate life for Dems - WSJ: "Three-quarters of California voters are expected to receive absentee ballots this year, and political experts project that 40% will be cast before South Carolina's primary on Saturday. But young people especially tend to procrastinate, so all ballots may not arrive until days after Super Tuesday. Many will also have to be verified. That's because Democrats have recently overhauled so many election procedures that mischief and mistakes are almost certain. Californians may now both register and vote at any place in their county on Election Day. Only two weeks ago California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law letting voters change their party identification and address through Election Day. Independents must ask for a Democratic ballot if they want to vote for a Democrat. Democrats are still griping about the chaotic Iowa caucuses, but the results from California—which awards 495 delegates—may not be known for weeks. This could keep marginal candidates in the race longer. But #Californiaproblems aside, perhaps the larger concern for the Democratic Party is that early voting and late counting could undermine the legitimacy of the eventual nominee."

SCHUMER PUSHING BULLOCK TOWARDS MONTANA SENATE RUN
Politico: "Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer met with Gov. Steve Bullock in Montana last weekend as Democrats make a last-ditch effort to woo him to run for the Senate this year, according to multiple sources familiar with the meeting. Bullock, the two-term governor and former presidential candidate, has repeatedly said he has no plans to challenge Republican Sen. Steve Daines this year. But the state's filing deadline is just over two weeks away, and Democrats have continued to pitch Bullock on seeking the Senate seat before the window closes. Democrats are hoping for a change of heart similar to that of former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, who also ran for president and initially said he had no interest in the Senate before ultimately changing his mind and entering the Senate race last August. Democrats believe that if Bullock were to reverse course and run for the Senate, it would instantly put Montana in play this fall and give them a wider path to taking back the chamber. Republicans have a 53-47 majority."

GOP has optimistic outlook on California - LAT: "Republicans are mounting an aggressive campaign to win back some of the seven California congressional seats they lost in 2018, a repudiation that turned the GOP into an endangered species in the state. … Republicans predict the 2018 Democratic victories will prove to be short-lived, in part because the Democratic candidates who promised to become moderate lawmakers ended up supporting President Trump's impeachment and have few major bipartisan legislative accomplishments to tout. The battle — which could answer whether California voters are done with the GOP or were merely expressing anger at Trump in 2018 — is likely to play out in four of the most competitive districts."

PLAY-BY-PLAY
In a letter 70 former U.S. senators say Senate is failing to perform its duties - WaPo


Boston Globe endorses WarrenBoston Globe

AUDIBLE: EBAY?
"I was just thinking, 'Oh my God, what are we going to do with all these shirts?'" – Shelby Cole, the former digital director for Kamala Harris' presidential campaign, discussing the bulk order of merchandise that was made and then left after the senator dropped out of the race.

Share your color commentary: Email us at HALFTIMEREPORT@FOXNEWS.COM and please make sure to include your name and hometown.

WHATCHU LOOKIN AT?
WTSP: "She didn't look scared, confused or disoriented. She looked angry. A baby girl born on Feb. 13 in Brazil appeared to be less than pleased by her arrival. A photographer captured the moment Isabela Pereira de Jesus locked eyes with a doctor and gave him a perfect death stare. The picture is making international headlines."

AND NOW, A WORD FROM CHARLES…
"The normalization of Trump is one indicator that there may be less to the populist insurrection than imagined." – Charles Krauthammer (1950-2018) writing in the Washington Post on April 27, 2017.  


 



Thursday, April 9, 2020

Your Friday Briefing

Friday, April 10, 2020 | View in browser
Good morning.
We’re covering signs that the government’s stimulus program isn’t working, the spread of the coronavirus to workers in U.S. food processing plants, and, for a change of pace, Weird Al Yankovic. And it’s Friday, so there’s a new news quiz.
By Chris Stanford
A storefront in Miami. An analysis of small businesses that employ hourly workers suggests more than 40 percent have closed since the coronavirus crisis began.  Scott McIntyre for The New York Times

‘Sudden black hole’ for the economy

More than 16 million Americans lost their jobs in the past three weeks, and there is a growing consensus among economists that the government’s efforts were too small and came too late to prevent businesses from abandoning workers.
The Federal Reserve said on Thursday that it could pump $2.3 trillion into the economy, using measures that go far beyond anything the central bank attempted during the 2008 financial crisis.
It’s as if “the economy as a whole has fallen into some sudden black hole,” said Kathy Bostjancic, chief U.S. financial economist at Oxford Economics.
From Opinion: The U.S. economy has almost doubled in size over the past four decades, but broad measures of economic health conceal an unequal distribution of gains. These charts show areas in which the country is likely to struggle.
Related: A federal loan program that promises emergency relief to small businesses has run low on funding. The program is supposed to offer up to $2 million, but recent applicants said they were told that loans would be capped at $15,000 per borrower.
Another angle: OPEC and other countries, including Russia, reached a tentative agreement to temporarily cut oil production. Here are the latest financial updates. (Markets in the U.S. and much of Europe are closed today for Good Friday.)

The risks to America’s food workers

As the pandemic reaches meat processing plants, some companies have offered financial incentives to keep workers on the job. But the spread of illness is forcing plants to close.
“My mom said the guy at the plant said they had to work to feed America. But my mom was sick,” said the son of a woman who worked at a poultry plant in Georgia. She died on Thursday.
There is no evidence that the virus can be transmitted through food, but health experts have advised wiping down packaging because the virus could survive on those surfaces for days.
Here are the latest updates from the U.S. and from abroad, as well as maps of the pandemic.
We’re also tracking the virus’s growth rate in hundreds of U.S. metro areas.
In other developments:
■ The number of new patients hospitalized with the virus in New York State is shrinking, but the daily death toll on Thursday was near 800 for a second day, bringing total fatalities to more than 7,000.
■ Allies of President Trump told The Times that they wanted him to limit his appearances at daily coronavirus briefings. The briefings have had high TV ratings, but Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, said the president “sometimes drowns out his own message.”
■ Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain was moved out of intensive care. Dominic Raab, the country’s caretaker leader, offered no timetable for when Mr. Johnson might return to work and signaled that lockdown measures would extend beyond next week.
■ The number of performers — and viewers — of sexually explicit live broadcasts has increased during the U.S. shutdown. We spoke to webcam models about their work.
■ The granddaughter of Rube Goldberg, the cartoonist known for designing absurdly elaborate contraptions to accomplish simple tasks, has invited people to build devices that drop a bar of soap into someone’s hand.
“The Daily”: Today’s episode is about Asian-Americans who say they have been attacked and blamed for the pandemic.
The details: We’ve compiled expert guidance on several subjects, including health, money and travel.
The Times is providing free access to much of our coronavirus coverage, and our Coronavirus Briefing newsletter — like all of our newsletters — is free. Please consider supporting our journalism with a subscription.

A new front for nationalism

Since World War II, the idea that global trade enhances security and prosperity has driven most major economies. When people exchange goods across borders, the logic goes, they gain better and cheaper products and become less likely to take up arms.
Now, with the entire world simultaneously in need of the same lifesaving tools, national interests are winning out. At least 69 countries have banned or restricted the export of protective equipment, medical devices or medicines, according to one estimate.
“The contest is over far more than which countries will make iPads or even advanced jets,” our reporters write. “This is a battle for supremacy over products that may determine who lives and who dies.”
Another angle: Migrant workers have been not only victims of the virus, but spreaders, too, creating new risks for a vulnerable population.

If you have some time, this is worth it

The enduring appeal of Weird Al Yankovic

Art Streiber for The New York Times
The singer who in the 1980s built a career out of song parodies has, somehow, never gone away.
A writer for The Times Magazine explains: “After 40 years, Yankovic is now no longer a novelty, but an institution — a garish bright patch in the middle of America’s pop-cultural wallpaper, a completely ridiculous national treasure, an absurd living legend.”
Above, Weird Al with 232 fans at a photo shoot in January, before the world got a lot weirder.
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Here’s what else is happening

Shift for Joe Biden: The former vice president announced proposals to lower the eligibility age for Medicare to 60 and to expand student debt forgiveness programs, part of an effort to appeal to progressives.
Wisconsin’s election mess: In the state’s scramble to expand voting by mail, thousands of absentee ballots went undelivered or were nullified.
Flood protection rules ignored: Local governments around the U.S. have flouted Federal Emergency Management Agency requirements for new and rebuilt homes, but almost none have been penalized for doing so.
Andrew Testa for The New York Times
Snapshot: Above, the Wells Tavern in London, which shut down last month during the coronavirus pandemic. Through two world wars, Britain’s pubs stayed open, but they have now been forced to close. (That includes the one favored by your briefing team and the rest of The Times’s London newsroom, a.k.a. “the Crown we go to.”)
News quiz: Did you follow the headlines this week? Test yourself.
Modern Love: In this week’s column, a woman who lost her husband of 56 years on the eve of the pandemic braced for despair, but felt resilient.
Late-night comedy: “Easter doesn’t feel at all exciting this year, probably because I’ve spent the last three weeks driving around looking for eggs already,” Jimmy Kimmel said.
What we’re reading: This recent Q. and A. in the Harvard Business Review with David Kessler, the co-author of “On Grief and Grieving.” James Robinson, our director of global analytics, said it “gave a name to something I think a lot of us are feeling: anticipatory grief.”
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Now, a break from the news

Melissa Clark
Cook: Matzo brei is the traditional Passover breakfast, which some prefer sweet and others savory. Our food writer Melissa Clark goes for savory, topped with fried onions.
Cope: Here’s how to have a family meeting when everyone’s at odds. Amanda Hess praises daily quarantine clapping. And here is how one family built a church for Easter, in their backyard.
Read: Holland Cotter looks to Henry David Thoreau for lessons on how to be constructive while alone. The economist Joseph Stiglitz has a pile of books on his nightstand that may inspire you to dig into Dickens. And N.K. Jemisin’s new novel, which celebrates New York City, is among nine books we recommend.
We have more ideas about what to read, cook, watch and do while staying safe at home.

And now for the Back Story on …

Before The Onion, there was Not The New York Times

When a parody of The New York Times appeared on newsstands during an 88-day strike of newspaper employees in 1978, celebrated writers like Nora Ephron and George Plimpton were credited with the coup.
It turns out, Times journalists had joined them: “Not The New York Times” was also an inside job.
Andrew Sondern/The New York Times
The parody featured three sections, 24 joke advertisements, 73 spoof articles and 155 fake news briefs, all meticulously edited to mimic The Times’s style. Even the typefaces used on the front page and the spacing of the headlines replicated those of the real paper.
The writer of one column praised Genghis Khan for his ability to “get things done,” and an in-depth investigation by a team of 35 Not The Times reporters found that cocaine “appears popular.”
“We all had a lot of time on our hands,” the designer Richard Yeend said.
After the strike ended, the Times journalists went back to work and kept quiet about their satirical moonlighting.
That’s it for this briefing. See you next time.
— Chris
Thank you
Weird Al provided this morning’s soundtrack. Theodore Kim and Jahaan Singh provided the break from the news. The Back Story was based on reporting by Alex Traub. You can reach the team at briefing@nytimes.com.
P.S.
• We’re listening to “The Daily.” Today’s episode is about reports of attacks on Asian-Americans.
• Here’s today’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: Hurricanes have strong ones (five letters). You can find all our puzzles here.
• The Times’s climate journalists will discuss some of the unexpected consequences of the coronavirus pandemic in a group call with readers today at 11:30 a.m. Eastern. R.S.V.P. here.
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