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Showing posts with label BUDGET. Show all posts

Thursday, January 27, 2022

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Wu hopes business vax mandate is temporary

 


 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: POLL GIVES EARLY LOOK AT AG RACE — Former Boston city councilor Andrea Campbell would take an early lead in the race for state attorney general if she gets in, a new poll shows, though most voters are undecided.

Campbell, who’s seriously considering a bid,  garnered 31 percent support in the MassINC Polling Group survey of 504 registered voters sponsored by Policy For Progress and featured on this week’s episode of The Horse Race.

Shannon Liss-Riordan, the Brookline labor attorney who kicked off her campaign earlier this week, got 3 percent. Quentin Palfrey, the 2018 Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor who’s likely to enter the AG race, got 2 percent. Fifty-four percent of respondents were undecided or refused to respond; 2 percent said they would vote for an unnamed candidate.

Campbell’s support was particularly strong within the bounds of Route 128, likely due to name recognition from her recent mayoral bid, pollster Steve Koczela said. Her support declined sharply outside of the I-495 belt where more respondents have not chosen a candidate. The full poll results, including other Democratic primaries, will be released Monday.

GOOD THURSDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu hopes her vaccine and mask mandates for businesses are only “temporary policies.”

“As community positivity goes down, as we see vaccination rates go up, we want to get back to a situation at some point where people are fully free to go about their lives,” Wu said in an interview on The Horse Race. But, she cautioned, “we’re not there yet.”

Wu wants to do more to address the vaccination-rate “disparities that we still see in race and income,” particularly when it comes to children, before relaxing any requirements. But she didn’t list specific targets for case, hospitalization and vaccination rates. And when it comes to the vaccine mandate for city workers, Wu’s now facing renewed legal action from several unions and a rejected impact bargaining agreement from another. Here are some non-Covid highlights from the interview, edited and condensed for length:

On Mass and Cass:  “I’ve been going out to the Newmarket and Mass and Cass area sometimes a couple of times a day … and things are still going very, very well. We do not have encampments, [they] have not returned. The former residents of the encampments who have been connected to low-threshold supportive housing remain in that housing. … We’ve already had people transition on from that transitional housing into permanent housing, and we’ll continue to see that happen.”

On her  fare-free bus pilot program “Our chief of streets has been at the table with the MBTA as well as the FTA [to work out implementation issues]. … The free 28 bus runs through the end of February, so the hope is that we will be able to seamlessly pick up continuing that route and adding the other two routes right after that.”

TODAY — Baker is on GBH’s “Boston Public Radio” at 11 a.m.; state Attorney General Maura Healey joins around 1 p.m. Wu announces appointments to the Civilian Review Board and the Internal Affairs Oversight Panel at 2 p.m. at BPD headquarters. Assistant House Speaker Katherine Clark talks federal aid at an 8:30 a.m. YMCA virtual roundtable and 12:30 p.m. AARP tele-town hallRep. Lori Trahan talks federal aid with AAA at 1:30 p.m.

Rep. Ayanna Pressley, state Sen. Jamie Eldridge and state Reps. Nika Elugardo and Mike Connolly host a 10 a.m. virtual press conference in support of legislation that would establish a public bank in Massachusetts.

Tips? Scoops? Email me: lkashinsky@politico.com . Also, we're aware that some links may be missing from Playbook when we publish. Our engineers are working on it.

BALLOT BATTLES

— REGISTRATION ROW: Some lawmakers are crying incumbent protection  after the House left same-day voter registration out of the voting reform bill teed up for debate today.

The House bill would enshrine pandemic-era mail-in voting and expand early in-person voting. But it skipped same-day registration, a major component of the VOTES Act the Senate passed last fall, infuriating activists who said the measure is already law in at least 20 other states.

Same-day registration is backed by governor hopeful and state Attorney General Maura Healey and both Secretary of State Bill Galvin and his Democratic primary rival, NAACP Boston Branch President Tanisha Sullivan. Rep. Ayanna Pressley urged House lawmakers to “swiftly reverse course,” calling the measure “critical to boosting voter turnout, especially among Black, brown, low-income and immigrant communities.”

“[House] leadership made the wrong call on this,” state Rep. Russell Holmes told me. “This to me is protecting incumbency, and I have not heard another argument. And that is antithetical to all of democracy and certainly does not help Black and brown people.”

House Ways and Means Chair Aaron Michlewitz said “we could not come to a consensus” on same-day registration and “we’re having further conversations.”

By yesterday evening, state Reps. Lindsay Sabadosa, Carmine Gentile and Nika Elugardo had all filed amendments proposing various forms of same-day voter registration. House lawmakers, including Speaker Ron Mariano, have resoundingly rejected such a measure in the past. But Sabadosa is hopeful, telling me: “In the wake of voting rights being curtailed in other states, passing same-day registration would make Massachusetts a leader in voting reform.”

DATELINE BEACON HILL

— SHOW ME THE MONEY: Gov. Charlie Baker unveiled his $48.5 billion FY ‘23 budget proposal on Wednesday. Here are some of the numbers you should know:

$693 million — In proposed tax breaks for renters, seniors, those with dependents and low-income workers.

234,000 — The number of low-income taxpayers Baker says could see relief by raising the income threshold to qualify for “no-tax status.”

$2 million —  The proposed threshold for the state’s estate tax, up from $1 million. Unlike current law, Baker would only tax dollars above that $2 million marker. Baker also wants to tax short-term capital gains at 5 percent instead of 12 percent.

$591 million — In new education spending. Baker says this would “fully fund” the Student Opportunity Act and includes $485 million in additional Chapter 70 aid for schools.

$115 million — For behavioral health programs including urgent care, community centers and a 24/7 helpline.

$300,000 — To create a new Office of Offshore Wind.

— The Boston Globe's Matt Stout and Jon Chesto break down the tax breaks: “‘The cost of just about everything is going up,’ Baker told reporters Wednesday. ‘The last two years have been pretty tough on a lot of the populations we’re looking to help here, and I’d love to see the Legislature take them seriously.’”

— CommonWealth Magazine’s Shira Schoenberg reports where the money’s coming from : “Baker’s budget counts on getting money from both legalizing sports betting and allowing Lottery bettors to use their debit cards — even though neither policy has yet passed the Legislature.”

— “At commutation hearing, convicted murderer said he will spend rest of life trying to make amends,” by Shelley Murphy, Boston Globe: “During a day-long commutation hearing at the State House Wednesday, Thomas Koonce apologized for the 1987 slaying of a 24-year-old New Bedford man and told the Governor’s Council he will spend the rest of his life giving back to society in an effort to make amends.”

— “Senate Bulks Up COVID Bill To $75 Mil,” by Colin A. Young, State House News Service (paywall): “The Massachusetts Senate debated and unanimously passed the state's latest COVID-19 response bill Wednesday, embracing the same focus on testing and masks as the House did in its version of the legislation but boosting the bottom line by more than 35 percent to $75 million in spending ... by calling for masks to be distributed also to early education and care facilities, congregate care, long-term care and nursing home facilities, personal care attendants, and home health care workers.”

— "Mass. needs more housing. Why not at Devens?" by Jon Chesto, Boston Globe: "Three north-central Massachusetts lawmakers plan to press the Baker administration to open up the sprawling Devens industrial park for more housing in a virtual meeting on Thursday with leaders of the quasi-public agency that oversees the area."

THE LATEST NUMBERS

— “Massachusetts reports 7,918 new coronavirus cases, drop in COVID-19 hospitalizations,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The state Department of Public Health on Wednesday reported 7,918 daily coronavirus cases, a 46% plunge from last Wednesday’s total of 14,647 infections. … The state’s average percent positivity is now 10.37%, significantly down from the rate of 23% earlier this month.”

VAX-ACHUSETTS

— "Man Can’t Get Heart Transplant Because He’s Not Vaccinated Against COVID," by Paul Burton, WBZ: “The family says he was at the front of the line to receive a transplant but because he has not received the COVID-19 vaccination he is no longer eligible according to hospital policy.”

FROM THE HUB

— “Lydia Edwards attends Boston council, Senate meetings at the same time,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “No, no one cloned Lydia Edwards — but the city councilor and newly minted state senator was in two meetings at once as she juggles both gigs. ‘I’m magical,’ Edwards deadpanned to the Herald when asked about it. ‘No, I was prepared for this — I knew all the amendments, I read up on all of it, and I took care of it gracefully.’”

— “Boston unions file appeal regarding vaccination mandate for city workforce,” by Danny McDonald and Nick Stoico, Boston Globe: “Mayor Michelle Wu’s decision to require city workers to get vaccinated against COVID-19 continues to stir acrimony within the ranks of the city’s first responders and beyond, with a trio of public safety unions on Wednesday renewing their legal fight against the mandate and a fourth rejecting a deal hashed out with the Wu administration to comply."

— “Boston Police patrolmen union votes down vaccine agreement as tension rises ahead of enforcement,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “The proposed agreement between Mayor Michelle Wu and the Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association went down in flames as union members ‘overwhelmingly’ voted against it just days ahead of the start of enforcement of the city’s coronavirus vaccine mandate.”

 “Mostly educators of color could face termination due to vaccine mandate, Boston Teachers Union says,” by Naomi Martin, Boston Globe: “Boston Public Schools, already struggling to build a workforce that reflects the diversity of its students, could lose dozens, perhaps hundreds, of educators of color when the city’s new employee vaccine mandate takes effect Monday, according to the Boston Teachers Union.”

— “Handful of unmasked people disrupts Boston City Council meeting,” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “In the middle of the meeting, the group of about a half-dozen people were asked by newly minted Council President Ed Flynn to don masks, which are required in City Hall amid the COVID-19 pandemic. When they refused, Flynn called a recess. … During the recess, the councilors filtered into their offices and the meeting was eventually re-started virtually via Zoom.”

— “Backlash grows after Tufts announces closure of children’s hospital,” by Priyanka Dayal McCluskey and Jessica Bartlett, Boston Globe: “The decision to close Tufts Children’s Hospital has triggered a backlash from doctors, nurses, and families mourning the impending loss of a historic and beloved institution and worried that some sick children could lose access to critical care.”

ON THE STUMP

— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Lawrence City Councilor Pavel Payano has been endorsed for the First Essex District state Senate seat by former state Rep. Brian Dempsey, state Sen. Barry Finegold and former Haverhill mayor James Rurak, per his campaign.

— “Sen. Harriette Chandler, the first woman from Worcester to be elected to state senate, will not run for reelection,” by Michael Bonner, MassLive: “Inside Worcester City Hall, where Harriette Chandler began her political career in 1991, the former Senate President said she will serve out the remainder of her term but not seek a 10th term in what she called the ‘greatest job’ she ever had.”

— DOMINO EFFECT: State Rep. David LeBouef quickly issued a statement saying he’s “seriously considering” running for Chandler’s seat.

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “T plans to add Green Line crash prevention tech a year earlier than scheduled,” by Taylor Dolven, Boston Globe: “MBTA general manager Steve Poftak said on Wednesday the agency plans to speed up the implementation of technology meant to prevent crashes on the Green Line. … By transferring around $45 million from its operating budget, for day-to-day needs, to its capital budget, for longer-term projects, Poftak told MBTA board members Wednesday, the tech could be implemented a year early, in 2023.”

DAY IN COURT

— "Uber passenger paralyzed in crash sues company for $63 million," by Tonya Alanez, Boston Globe: “[Will] Good, 31, was left a quadriplegic in the accident. He wants his experience to be a cautionary tale and a catalyst for more oversight of the ride-hailing industry. On Tuesday, he filed a negligence lawsuit against Uber, saying it hired a risky driver with a spotty record and should have known he would put others in jeopardy.”

THE PRESSLEY PARTY

— GETTING CURIOUS: Rep. Ayanna Pressley will appear on an episode of the upcoming Netflix series Getting Curious with Jonathan Van Ness. A promo on Instagram teases a conversation about societal fixation on hair and looks like the sit-down interview was filmed on the Hill.

— “Biden must release memo on student-debt cancellation, 85 Democrats say,” by Ayelet Sheffey, Insider: “On Wednesday, Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Chuck Schumer, along with Reps. Pramila Jayapal, Ayanna Pressley, Ilhan Omar, and Katie Porter, led 79 of their Democratic colleagues in demanding that Biden release the memo outlining his legal ability to cancel federal student debt broadly and ‘immediately’ cancel up to $50,000 in student debt per borrower.”

DATELINE D.C.

— “Outgoing Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer's connections to Massachusetts,” by Peter Eliopoulos, WCVB: “The 83-year-old was born and raised in San Francisco, but he has multiple ties to Massachusetts. He graduated from Harvard Law School in Cambridge, worked as a law professor there from 1967 until 1980, and he still owns a home in Cambridge.”

— “Supreme Court confirmation fight to make history in 50-50 Senate,” by Marianne LeVine and Burgess Everett, POLITICO: “Democrats’ razor-thin majority will have to make history to confirm Stephen Breyer’s successor to the Supreme Court. A 50-50 Senate has never done it before. … It will be President Joe Biden’s first opportunity to fill a Supreme Court vacancy. Biden promised that he would nominate a Black woman, should an opening on the court arise, but it could take weeks before the White House names a final candidate.”

FROM THE 413

— “Mud season has long caused driving headaches in Western Mass. A new proposal asks the state to look at the issue,” by Danny Jin, Berkshire Eagle: “Many Western Massachusetts residents are well aware of what mud season does to dirt roads, but a proposal from Western Massachusetts lawmakers asks the state Legislature to take a look at the issue.”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— "DAs in Massachusetts to begin sending out letters to rape survivors whose kits were never tested," by Karen Anderson and Kevin Rothstein, WCVB: "The Massachusetts State Police Crime Laboratory has identified nearly 6,000 rape kits that could be tested for DNA but never were, and has notified district attorneys around the state of them so their offices can begin reaching out to survivors."

— “Staffing shortages are hurting sick prisoners at Norfolk prison, advocates claim,” by Sarah Betancourt, GBH News: “Prisoners and advocates report a nursing shortage and lack of a permanent medical director are affecting operations at the Massachusetts Correctional Institute at Norfolk, leaving high-needs prisoners with inadequate care.”

— ”Despite delay, new standards commission coming online to help police the police,” by Kathy Curran, WCVB: “Accountability and transparency in law enforcement are a vital part of Massachusetts police reform, but a key new [POST] commission aimed at protecting the public from police officers who have crossed the line is facing delays. Many key jobs remain unfilled and officers' disciplinary histories haven't been sent in by many departments.”

— IN MEMORIAM: “David Mugar, philanthropist who added fireworks to Boston’s July Fourth celebration, dies at 82,” by Joseph P. Kahn, Boston Globe.

MEANWHILE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE

— “Rapid COVID-19 tests to be sold in New Hampshire liquor stores, governor says,” by Kirk Enstrom, WMUR: “[Gov. Chris] Sununu said the state has secured 1 million rapid tests, and the Executive Council authorized their purchase Wednesday morning. He said that within the next two weeks, he expects the tests to be available at liquor stores.”

MEANWHILE IN RHODE ISLAND

— “Seth Magaziner announces run for Congress,” by Steph Machado, Eli Sherman and Tim White, WPRI: “General Treasurer Seth Magaziner will abandon his race for governor to run in the Democratic primary for Rhode Island’s 2nd Congressional District, his campaign announced Wednesday.”

CONGRATS — to John Holdren, Woodwell Climate Research Center president emeritus and former science advisor to President Barack Obama, who will receive the National Academy of Sciences Public Welfare Medal.

TRANSITIONS — Tiffany Chu is Boston Mayor Michelle Wu’s new chief of staff.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Anna Ornstein, Jenna Kaplan and Cherilyn Strader. Happy belated to the Boston Herald’s Amy Sokolow, who celebrated Tuesday.

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Wednesday, August 18, 2021

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Hitting the vax ceiling

 




 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY RENUKA RAYASAM

Presented by

AT&T

With help from Myah Ward

BOOST, THERE IT IS — Are Covid booster shots going to become a yearly ritual, or is it going to be three jabs and you’re out? Now that the Biden administration is finalizing a plan that would call for Americans to get a third vaccine dose eight months after their last one, Nightly reached out to scientists who study Covid to help us understand what’s coming next.

Three really could prove to be the magic dosing number — if the coronavirus remains relatively stable. Protecting against Hepatitis B, for example, requires three vaccine doses for lasting immunity.

Even though Delta is more infectious than previous variants, it’s still the same virus as the original Covid strain. A third vaccine dose this fall wouldn’t be a different formulation than the first two — your body just needs more of it.

Yet researchers are still trying to figure out the best dosing intervals for the Covid vaccines. The current month-or-so wait between the two jabs was based on getting as many people protected as quickly as possible, not necessarily to keep them protected as long as possible.

Covid-19 vaccination doses are ready to be administered at a popup vaccination clinic at Maple Leaf Bar in New Orleans.

Covid-19 vaccination doses are ready to be administered at a popup vaccination clinic at Maple Leaf Bar in New Orleans. | Mario Tama/Getty Images

And there is a chance that Covid vaccines are going to become an annual tradition. If the virus mutates enough, people would require follow-up doses of a differently formulated vaccine.

This is what happens with the flu. More than 100 years after the 1918 pandemic, the flu is still with us, with a different strain dominating each winter. The flu shot you get (or should get) every fall isn’t a booster. It’s a different vaccine formula that’s designed to protect against whatever new strain pops up.

Akiko Iwasaki, a professor of immunobiology at Yale School of Medicine, told Nightly that she doesn’t see yearly shots happening yet. Even the Lambda variant, which was first identified in Peru last year and could be resistant to current vaccines, hasn’t taken over in places where Delta dominates.

And right now, it’s Delta that is dramatically changing the Covid vaccine math. A new study from Israel, along with CDC data set to be released later this week, shows declining immunity from the Pfizer and Moderna shots. Israel is already administering third doses.

The efficacy of all vaccines fades a little over time, Iwasaki said. A freshly vaccinated person will have more protection against Covid than someone who was vaccinated in January. But the degree of the erosion varies. And the Pfizer and Moderna shots have proven to be pretty durable at protecting against Covid.

Without Delta, Iwasaki said, there would probably be no need for boosters. The Delta variant carries 1,000 times the viral load as the original Covid strain. That means that a person needs more vaccine to fend off serious infection.

“I just learned to be very humble with this virus because it comes up with different tricks,” Iwasaki said. “It is still trying to find its sweet spot.”

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas for us at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at rrayasam@politico.com and on Twitter at @RenuRayasam.

 

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AFGHANISTAN

National security adviser Jake Sullivan talks about Afghanistan

— Inspector general report paints a ‘bleak’ portrait of 20 years in Afghanistan: The Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction painted a troubling picture of America’s 20 years in Afghanistan today . “If the goal was to rebuild and leave behind a country that can sustain itself and pose little threat to U.S. national security interests, the overall picture is bleak,” John Sopko, the SIGAR, wrote in the report, titled “What We Need to Learn: Lessons from Twenty Years of Afghanistan Reconstruction.”

— Dem Senate panels demand answers on Biden’s ‘failures’ in Afghanistan: Three Democrat-led Senate committees are vowing to investigate the Biden administration’s bungled withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan, as officials scramble to evacuate American citizens and Afghan allies. Statements from the leaders of the Senate’s Intelligence, Foreign Relations and Armed Services committees reflect the widespread bipartisan anger over what is widely perceived as a chaotic and poorly planned exit from America’s longest war. It's concluding with a historic rush to power by a militant group that the U.S. has spent trillions of dollars and sacrificed American blood to stave off for two decades.

— Insiders say Biden’s team wasted precious time on evacuating Afghans: Flaws in the planning and execution of the withdrawal have led to wrenching scenes of Afghans clinging to U.S. military cargo planes as they race out of Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul , where Biden has dispatched up to 7,000 troops to handle the chaos. In fact, it was only on Saturday that the State Department task force approached those same activist organizations and sought their help to fill out a list with names of people needing relocation.

— Taliban takeover leaves Afghan diplomats in Washington limbo: Afghan diplomats in Washington and New York are putting on a brave face as they battle the fall of their home country to the Taliban, the likely loss of employment in the U.S., and their fears for the fate of family members and friends stuck in Afghanistan. For now, they’re just trying to do their day jobs — which have become a desperate effort to help Afghans escape amid widespread reports of retribution carried out against those who helped the Americans.

 

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TALKING TO THE EXPERTS

WHO’S ON FIRST? Nightly’s Myah Ward checked in with our go-to experts and asked how they’re weighing the epidemiological costs and benefits of boosters shots for Americans against the argument that the U.S. should instead donate 300 million first-time shots to the rest of the world. These answers have been edited.

“The cost of leaving much of the world unvaccinated is that we will have more viral replication among completely vulnerable hosts — people who have never been exposed to the virus and have never been vaccinated. These are the people most at risk for death or severe disease. They transmit the virus more effectively to others, leading to epidemic outbreaks. And this concentrated spread is what helps lead to more mutations and new strains of the virus by virtue of having more replication.

“Ideally, we would be able to get boosters to Americans and get more shots to the rest of the world. But, that is not the case, or at least not at this moment.

“I think that there is urgency to getting the immunocompromised a third dose. But in terms of healthy people with normal immune systems, they are still very well protected from bad outcomes, while many of our neighbors around the world are not.

“Over time, this is going to change as we get further away from our doses. Vaccines work, but they are not perfect, and I do suspect we will all need boosters at some point. For now, vaccinating vulnerable countries that have had very few doses is a more urgent task.” — Abraar Karan, infectious disease fellow at Stanford University

“I do not think immunocompetent Americans need an extra booster shot, and I think the U.S. should donate some of its large surplus vaccine supply for global vaccine equity, which will decrease worldwide transmission and the emergence of future variants.

T cells protect us from severe disease and the T cells generated by the vaccines are holding up amazingly well, with over 99 percent of the hospitalizations being among unvaccinated adults in the U.S. Antibodies waning from vaccination is a natural process of the immune system and, when our antibodies wane, memory B cells (generated by the vaccines) serve as the blueprint to make more. Memory B cells are primed to produce antibodies adapted or evolved toward the variants.” — Monica Gandhi, infectious diseases expert at the University of California at San Francisco

“There is an urgent need to reframe this discussion and move away from considering this as a zero-sum game of limited doses of mRNA and adenovirus vectored vaccines. There are an estimated 1.1 billion unvaccinated people on the African continent, 650 million in Latin America, another 500 million smaller Asian countries. We need 4 to 6 billion doses of vaccines, so even if the U.S. were to donate all 300 million doses, that would only get us less than 10 percent of the way there. So yes, while we must encourage the Biden administration to continue sharing vaccines, we must also recognize that this issue is so much bigger. Here’s my proposal: Use our Texas Children’s Hospital low-cost recombinant protein Covid vaccine now being accelerated in India and elsewhere in Asia. There’s no reason why the Biden administration could not produce 2 to 3 billion doses of our vaccine in order to immunize the African continent or Latin America and smaller Asian nations by the end of 2021. It’s beyond frustrating that none of the G-7 leaders will take ownership of this issue and make it happen.” — Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at the Baylor College of Medicine

“There is not evidence of failure of the vaccines to prevent hospitalizations — which is what they were designed to do. It’s not going to be the case that getting third doses into people’s arms changes the trajectory of the pandemic in the world or even in the U.S. Getting first doses into people’s arms in Mississippi is more important than getting third doses into the arms of Pennsylvanians, for example. If one is fully vaccinated they should be assured that any breakthrough infection they have will be mild or asymptomatic and, for me, that is a huge success.” — Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— Abbott tests positive: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott tested positive for Covid , his office said today. The Republican governor was fully vaccinated against the virus. The governor is not currently experiencing any symptoms, and Texas first lady Cecilia Abbott tested negative, his office added

— Senior House Dems launch pressure campaign ahead of key budget vote: Senior House Democrats today aggressively pushed their caucus to fall in line behind next week’s key budget vote, hoping to quell a rank-and-file rebellion that threatens to at least temporarily derail Biden’s economic agenda. “We have to hold firm. We have to stay together,” Rep. Peter DeFazio, chair of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, said on a call with members, according to multiple people listening. “If you want to be in this game, and you want the House to be a meaningful participant, then stay together next week.”

— Pete Buttigieg announces he and Chasten will be parents: Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg announced today that he and his husband are expectant parents . The Buttigiegs have been open about their difficulties trying to adopt a child as a married couple. In a July profile of Chasten Buttigieg, The Washington Post reported that the two had been trying to do so for more than a year, even going so far as “on multiple occasions, to shop for baby gear and discuss names,” but to no avail.

— Former Rep. Doug Ose drops out of California recall after heart attack: Ose has ended his California gubernatorial campaign after suffering a heart attack just weeks ahead of the election. Ose served multiple terms in Congress representing the Sacramento area before joining the field of Republicans vying to replace Gov. Gavin Newsom in a recall election. He built his campaign on conservative appeals to reduce crime and combat homelessness.

— Laxalt launches Senate bid in Nevada: Former Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt officially launched a campaign for Senate today, becoming the most prominent Republican to say he’ll run against Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto in a perennial swing state. Laxalt is the son of former Sen. Pete Domenici (R-N.M.) and the grandson of former Sen. Paul Laxalt (R-Nev.). His grandfather also served as Nevada governor — a job the younger Laxalt sought in 2018, when he was defeated by Democrat Steve Sisolak by roughly 4 percentage points.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

200 million

The number of cars left vulnerable to hackers by a flaw in software made by Blackberry. The flaw has also left critical hospital and factory equipment vulnerable — and the company opted to keep it secret for months.

 

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PARTING WORDS

Afghan National Army soldiers with the 209th Shaheen Corps train in Mazar-e-Sharif.

Afghan National Army soldiers with the 209th Shaheen Corps train in Mazar-e-Sharif. | Paula Bronstein for POLITICO Magazine

‘JUST WATCHING WITH HORROR’ — Paula Bronstein first began photographing Afghanistan in 2001. She writes in POLITICO Magazine on her experiences in Afghanistan as the country collapsed:

We’re all watching — I say “we,” the media, both foreign and local — just watching with horror. Everything is going viral from Kabul. Everybody has a phone with a camera. And every step of the way, this disaster unfolding is being documented. The war today is run by social media — the war many years ago was not. Today, the Taliban wanted to show when they came to the gates of Mazar-e-Sharif. And that was shared by many, many Afghans. Every step of the way was getting tweeted out just like wildfire.

Safa, 5, sits on luggage as her family checks into their flight to Los Angeles at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul.

Safa, 5, sits on luggage as her family checks into their flight to Los Angeles at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul. | Paula Bronstein for POLITICO Magazine

 

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