WED 3/30/22
GOP Support for Brown Jackson – Susan Collins of Maine has told The New York Times she will vote to confirm federal Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court. This makes Collins the first, and potentially only Republican senator to support Brown Jackson to replace the retiring Justice Stephen Breyer at the end of the current term, and virtually assures President Biden's choice will take the seat.
Meanwhile: But Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) still has his 2024 presidential run sound bites from grilling Brown Jackson over her sentencing record on child pornography cases and on her alleged position on Critical Race Theory taught in grade schools – we’ll repeat it again; CRT is not taught below college level.
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Dismal Numbers – 1.) Russian troops have forcibly deported more than 20,000 Ukrainians to Russia in Vladimir Putin’s “special military operation,” Mariupol city council members say (per NPR) and, 2.) More than 4 million Ukrainians, about one-tenth its prewar population, have fled their country as refugees (also NPR).
The 4-million-plus consists mostly of women and children, as most Ukrainian men are now part of the country’s military, pushing back Russian troops. Britain’s Defense Ministry says “heavy losses” are forcing Russian forces back into Russia and Belarus.
Meanwhile: Ukraine officials doubt Russia’s promises made in cease fire talks held in Turkey earlier this week that it will “drastically reduce” attacks on Kyiv and Chernihiv, The Washington Post reports. Both cities were struck overnight Tuesday, and the belief is now that Russia made the promise in order to buy time to rotate its troops.
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Two Years Late? – The White House has just launched covid.gov, “a new one-stop shop website for vaccination tests, treatments, masks, and the latest COVID-19 information.” It took us two attempts to successfully find it – in the first, we were directed to covid.gov.pk, a Pakistan government site that beat the U.S. site to the Web.
Meanwhile: The Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced Tuesday that people age 50 and older are now eligible for a second booster shot of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine, beginning today, The Washington Post reports.
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Meanwhile, in the world of every-day Americans -- In January 2021 the Gallup Live Evaluation Index hit 59.2%, a 14-year high measuring those people who consider themselves to be “thriving” as compared with “struggling” or “suffering.” Another way of looking at it is as a measure of stress: those who are striving feel less of it.
The other shoe drops: The latest Index has the number at 53.25, which is the lowest since it hit the high. Seems like inflation is causing a deflation in the level of thriving.
The Gallup pollsters looked at the breakdown of responses along political lines. Back in October 2020, not surprisingly, the percent of Republicans thriving was 69.9%. The number has decreased, going to 64.7% in June 2021, 58.1% in December 2021, but then up a bit to 60.25% in February 2022.
The Dems back in October 2020 were at 42.4% (perhaps not feeling so positive about Biden’s chances), then by June 2021 the number was up to 58.1%. However, there has been a decline since then, to 55.3% in December 2021 and 53.3% in February 2022.
How did this happen? Seems somewhat surprising that the Republicans are thriving more than the Democrats.
Slight solace. Gallup shows that since 2008 the measure hit the low mark of 46.8% twice: In November 2008, when the Dow was at its low point during the financial crisis, and in April 2020, when U.S. unemployment claims hit 30 million.
So the latest figure is 6.45 points higher than those lows.
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Correction: 4-1/2 Minutes Short – We shorted the blank portion of President Nixon’s White House phone tapes turned over in connection with Watergate, in our item about President Trump’s missing January 6, 2021, communications Tuesday. In the case of Richard Nixon and Watergate, 18 and ½ minutes were missing, four-and-a-half minutes longer than we credited to Nixon’s personal secretary, Rose Mary Woods, but still more than 439 minutes short of the length of missing communications from and to Donald J. Trump during the middle of the Big Lie-triggered insurrection on the Capitol. We regret the mistake.
--Edited by Todd Lassa and Gary S. Vasilash
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TUE 3/29/22
Biden Won’t Back Down – President Biden says he is not taking back his comments in Warsaw last weekend that “for God’s sake, this man,” Russian President Vladimir Putin, “cannot remain in power.” …
“I’m not walking anything back,” Biden said as he released his Fiscal Year 2023 federal budget Monday. “But I wasn’t then, nor am I now, articulating a policy change.” (Per The Guardian.)
Democratic political consultant and strategist to the 1992 Clinton-Gore campaign, Paul Begala, likened Biden’s “for God’s sake” ad-lib, on NPR’s Morning Edition, to President Ronald Reagan calling the Soviet Union “the evil empire.”
Meanwhile: Negotiators from Kyiv and Moscow continue to meet in Istanbul to try and reach a ceasefire. Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky has offered “neutral status”, meaning he will not seek NATO membership, if Putin removes his troops from the country.
Breaking Tuesday: As Ukraine outlined its peace proposals in Turkey, Russia said it will “drastically reduce” its “activity” in areas around Ukraine’s capital Kyiv and Chernihiv, “to increase mutual trust and create the necessary conditions for further negotiations,” said Russian Deputy Defense Minister Alexander Fomin (per The Washington Post).
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About Biden’s Budget – White House budget requests, at best, serve as starting points for what the president’s party in Congress want for the coming fiscal year. For the record, Biden’s $5.8-trillion request includes more money for affordable housing and local police funding while – here’s the controversial part – proposing a minimum 20% income tax on billionaires. Although Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) is on record as opposing such taxes on the rich, The Hill says at the very least Biden will use this as a political cudgel for the 2022 midterms and possibly the 2024 presidential election.
Republicans will have a hard time campaigning against taxing billionaires, The Hill posits, citing a ProPublica story last June that several of the richest people in the U.S. pay little or no taxes, including Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, Tesla and SpaceX’s Elon Musk, Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg and Fox News’/Succession inspiration Rupert Murdoch.
The White House claims the president’s budget request would cut the deficit by more than $1 trillion over the next decade and no one earning less than $400,000 per year will pay a penny more in taxes. Biden also requests $773 billion for the Department of Defense for FY23.
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‘Yuge’ Next to Watergate’s 14-Minute ‘Gap’ – President Trump’s White House records handed over to the House Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol insurrection are missing seven-hours, 37-minutes of communications, according to documents obtained by The Washington Post and CBS News. Bob Woodward and Robert Costa report the House panel is “investigating whether it has the full record” as turned over by the National Archives earlier this year, or whether Trump communicated from 11:17 a.m. to 6:54 p.m. that day using his aides’ phones and/or personal “burner” phones, people familiar with the probe told Woodcosta.
Our Reference: “Fourteen-minute gap” refers to a blank spot in the Watergate tapes recorded by Richard M. Nixon’s secretary, Rose Mary Woods. Those tapes nevertheless contributed to the president’s eventual resignation ahead of a probable bi-partisan impeachment.
Attempted Coup News You Can Use: U.S. District Judge David O. Carter on Monday said Donald J. Trump “more likely than not” committed federal crimes in trying to obstruct the congressional count of electoral votes January 6, 2021 (WaPo), which is seen as putting more pressure on the Justice Department to investigate the 45th president.
Meanwhile: The House January 6 panel referred to the DOJ contempt charges against former Trump aides Peter Navarro (trade policy) and Dan Scavino (communications) for refusing to testify over their alleged plan to overturn the November 2020 election. Former White House advisor, and current Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner is scheduled Thursday to testify before the 1/6 committee, which may now call on Ginni Thomas, wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, over her texts exchanged between the election and the insurgency with then-White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows.
--Compiled by Todd Lassa