Democrats Huddle As Caucus Ascertains What’ll Happen This Week

Today, both the House and Senate Democratic caucuses have their big meetings. As we’ve seen in recent weeks, these meetings can spur significant forward motion. We’ll be watching what comes out of them this week even more closely than usual — negotiations over the handful of unresolved issues in the reconciliation package have shrunk to, for the most part, include only leadership and the obstinate few (mainly Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema).

There are deadlines coming up at the end of the week that will make Democrats’ lives harder if reconciliation is still dragging by then. The October 31 expiration of the highway funding extension will set up another pressure point to vote on the bipartisan infrastructure bill, like we saw at the end of September. And the White House really wants all of this finished up in time for President Joe Biden’s sojourn to Glasgow for the UN Climate Summit, which begins Nov. 1.

Where Things Stand: So, Is That It For Biden’s Climate Agenda?

One of the many soft deadlines Democrats are facing as they trudge forward with their reconciliation package is the looming UN Climate Change summit in Glasgow. Last year’s Conference of Parties was postponed because of the pandemic, and, with the world now two years deeper into its worsening crisis, this year’s gathering is being heralded as the most important since the Paris Agreement was hammered out in 2015.

All that build-up comes as the U.S. Senate struggles to deliver the policies that would fulfill the President’s climate agenda.

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Do We Have a Supply Chain to the Future?

We hear endlessly about the broken ‘supply chains’ that are causing product shortages and rising prices. Here is a pretty good overarching description of what exactly that means: the mix of radically changed consumer behaviors along with various knock-on effects from factory closures, retoolings and more that happened in the early months of the pandemic. I recommend it because it gives a good sense of just how intractable the issue is at least in the short term and how the different factors interact with each other.

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Understanding the Social Networks

These are rough days for Facebook. You don’t need me to tell you that. Here’s another article about how the Facebook algorithm was optimized to drive more provocative and emotion-laden content. Basically, it was refined to put stuff in front of you that makes you angry. When I read these articles I am reminded that most people have not really internalized how the social networks work. Even when people understand in some sense – and often even in detail – how the algorithms work they still tend to see these platforms as modern, digital versions of the town square. There have always been people saying nonsensical things, lying, unknowingly peddling inaccurate information. And our whole civic order is based on a deep skepticism about any authority’s ability to determine what’s true or accurate and what’s not. So really there’s nothing new under the sun, many people say.

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Biden Brings Aboard GOP Election Official Who Resisted Big Lie

The newest addition to the Biden administration is a prominent Republican official who fought back against Donald Trump’s lies that the 2020 election had been stolen. 

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Executive Privilege Whack-A-Mole: Biden Rejects Trump’s Claim Again

President Joe Biden on Monday shot down yet again his predecessor’s latest attempt to invoke executive privilege over a new round of White House records sought by the House Jan. 6 committee.

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Youngkin Ad Features Mom Whose Son Was Terrified By Toni Morrison Novel

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things.

Mom I’m Scared

Virginia GOP gubernatorial nominee Glenn Youngkin put out a 60-second ad yesterday of a Very Concerned Mother who somberly recounts how her son showed her his school reading material, and how her “heart sunk” because the reading was “some of the most explicit material you can imagine.”

  • Lawmakers’ “faces turned bright red” upon reading the material when the mother, Laura Murphy, brought it to them, she claims.
  • Curiously enough, the ad never mentions which book it was or how old Murphy’s son was at the time.

Greatest Country In The World

As Democrats whittle paid leave from 12 weeks down to a mere four in their negotiations over their reconciliation package, a new analysis by the New York Times shows how badly the U.S. is falling behind on leave compared to the rest of the world.

  • The U.S. is one of the only six countries in the world that doesn’t have any paid leave – and the only wealthy country that doesn’t offer it:
  • Four weeks of leave would still leave the U.S. way behind most other countries. Only 26 countries offer four weeks or less out of the 174 countries that have paid leave. The average is 29 weeks.

Infrastructure Scramble Continues

Democratic leaders will be rushing today to hammer out a framework for the reconciliation package containing Biden’s sweeping Build Back Better agenda and pass the bipartisan infrastructure bill (BIF) this week before the President leaves for a climate summit in Glasgow.

  • The House Democratic Caucus will hold a meeting this morning. Senate Democrats will hold a party lunch and are expected to speak to the press afterward.
  • Senate Finance Committee Chair Ron Wyden (D-OR) is working on the billionaire tax proposal.
  • Some Democrats aren’t giving up on trying to include immigration reform in the package, despite the Senate parliamentarian’s previous rejections.

Mo Brooks Chucks Staff Right Under Honking Bus

Rep. Mo Brooks (R-AL), one of the Trump lackeys whom two unnamed Jan. 6 rally organizers told Rolling Stone magazine was intimately involved in planning the rallies that preceded the Capitol attack, claimed on Monday evening that he had “no involvement” in those events.

  • The GOP lawmaker hot-potatoed it to his staff. “I don’t know if my staff did. .. but if they did I’d be proud of them for helping to put together a rally lawful under the First Amendment at the ellipse to protest voter fraud and election theft,” he told CNN (the 2020 election was not tainted by voter fraud).
  • Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO), one of the other Republicans identified in the Rolling Stone article, similarly denied the allegations, insisting yesterday that she had “no role in the planning or execution of any event that took place at the Capitol or anywhere in Washington, DC” on Jan. 6. But “with the help of my staff, I accepted an invitation to speak at one event” that day, she said, but “ultimately I did not speak at any events on January 6th.”

DeSantis Pretends He Didn’t Offer Reward To Unvaxed Cops

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) backtracked wildly yesterday after dangling a $5,000 signing bonus to out-of-state cops who refuse to get the COVID-19 vaccine and entice them to move to the Sunshine State.

  • DeSantis insisted his plan actually has “​​nothing to do with” vaccines and that it’s “for officers, period.” The offer goes out to any poor, beleaguered cops “if the morale is low” and they “can’t take that environment,” the governor said, adding that “the corporate media lies.”
  • The thing about that, though, is that DeSantis was definitely talking about vaccine mandates when he was telling Fox News about his proposal on Sunday. He and Maria Bartiromo were wringing their hands over workers, including police officers, who were quitting over workplace vaccine mandates when he brought up the $5,000 bonus:

Tennessee GOPer Indicted On Campaign Finance Charges

A federal grand jury indicted Tennessee state Sen. Brian Kelsey (R) on Friday for alleged campaign finance law violations in connection with his failed campaign for U.S. Congress in 2016, the Justice Department announced yesterday.

Biden Stumps For McAuliffe

The President will be campaigning this evening for Terry McAuliffe, who’s currently neck-and-neck with Glenn Youngkin.  

Another House Dem Out

Rep. Anthony Brown (D-MD) announced yesterday that he would not be running for reelection in 2022 because he’ll be making a bid for Maryland attorney general instead.

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A Hectic Week On The Hill As The Finish Line Comes Into Sight—For Real, This Time

Strap in, everyone. We’re in for quite a ride.

Democratic leaders are scrambling to conclude negotiations over the reconciliation bill for President Joe Biden’s sweeping Build Back Better plan this week and also put the bipartisan infrastructure bill (BIF) to a House vote this week.

The pressure’s on, especially given Biden’s upcoming trip to the international climate change summit in Glasgow on November 1. The President has told his fellow Democrats that he wants to have a deal on reconciliation clinched before then.

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