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Showing posts with label CANNABIS. Show all posts

Monday, November 1, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: 6 neighborhoods to watch in Boston's elections

 



 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

THE BIG PICTURE — From the mayor’s race to the council contests, Tuesday’s election results could offer one of the clearest pictures yet of Boston’s political shifts over the past couple decades as the city’s neighborhoods continue to gentrify and diversify.

Turnout has declined in traditionally whiter and more conservative neighborhoods like South Boston and West Roxbury over the past decade, per the Bay State Banner’s Yawu Miller, and increased in more liberal neighborhoods with "upwardly mobile whites" like Jamaica Plain and the South End. Simply put, this isn’t your grandfather’s — or even your father’s — mayoral map anymore.

Michelle Wu spent the weekend in East Boston, Charlestown and Dorchester and has stops today in Chinatown, Jamaica Plain and on Boston University’s campus. Annissa Essaibi George is in the midst of a 24-hour campaign swing through Eastie, Charlestown, Allston, Dorchester, Roxbury and Hyde Park.

Here are the neighborhoods I’m watching Tuesday:

ROXBURY and MATTAPAN — Voters in these neighborhoods overwhelmingly cast ballots for African American candidates in the preliminary election. Tuesday will tell us which direction they went after none of the three Black candidates made it to the general — whether that’s to Wu, a progressive city councilor who would be the city’s first Asian American mayor, or to Essaibi George, a more moderate councilor who would be the city’s first Arab American mayor.

JAMAICA PLAIN, ROSLINDALE and WEST ROXBURY — The hotly contested District 6 City Council race between Kendra Hicks, a community organizer from Jamaica Plain, and Mary Tamer, a former school committee member from West Roxbury, could drive up turnout in these neighborhoods. JP and Roslindale have been “helping elect much more liberal candidates and women and people of color to local office,” said Democratic consultant Wilnelia Rivera, who’s personally supporting Wu but not working for her. Strong turnout in those neighborhoods could help stamp Hicks’ ticket to the City Council and add to Wu’s tally. But a higher turnout in more conservative West Roxbury could help Tamer, who finished second to Hicks in the D6 preliminary, and give Essaibi George a boost.

DORCHESTER — I’m looking at Ward 16 here, less for Essaibi George, who needs to build on her already dominant preliminary performance here, but more for what turnout could mean in the at-large council race. While Councilors Julia Mejia and Michael Flaherty seem on track for reelection, polls show a close race between Ruthzee Louijeune, Erin Murphy, David Halbert and Carla Monteiro for the other two at-large seats. A strong showing in Ward 16 could help give Murphy an edge, Rivera said. GBH News and the Bay State Banner’s Miller have more on Boston’s new wave of voters, and the Boston Globe has more neighborhoods to watch.

GOOD MONDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTSElection week is finally here, and Playbook is going to look a bit different for the next few days. Think of it as your peek into my reporter's notebook.

Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook? Get in touch: lkashinsky@politico.com.

TODAY — Gov. Charlie Baker, Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito, House and Senate leaders hold their leadership meeting at noon with a media availability to follow. Baker and Polito make a MassWorks grant announcement at 3 p.m. in Salem. Secretary of State Bill Galvin hosts a pre-election media availability at 10:30 a.m. at the State House. Wu is on Boston 87.7FM at 8:30 a.m., hosts a 9:30 a.m. meet-and-greet with Sen. Elizabeth Warren at Pavement Coffeehouse at BU, is on Urban Heat Radio at 10:15 a.m., hosts a press availability at 1 p.m. at the Chinatown Gate and a 4 p.m. canvass kickoff in JP. Essaibi George is live on BNN at 5 p.m. and wraps her 24-hour campaign swing with an election eve rally at 6:30 p.m. in Hyde Park. State Attorney General Maura Healey virtually delivers the keynote at the British Consulate in Boston’s COP26 panel discussion on climate equity at 3 p.m.

 

JOIN TUESDAY FOR A TALK ON THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE AIR TRAVEL: As delegates descend on Glasgow for the COP26 global climate summit, reducing carbon emissions in the aviation sector will play a critical role in the progress of fighting climate change. Join POLITICO for a deep-dive conversation that will explore the increased use of sustainable aviation fuel, better performance aircraft, and other breakthroughs in to cut greenhouse gas emissions and meet broader sustainability goals. REGISTER HERE.

 
 
DATELINE BEACON HILL

– “ARPA Bill Grew to $3.82 Bil Before House Passage,” by Katie Lannan, Chris Lisinski and Chris Van Buskirk, State House News Service (paywall): “The bill began with a bottom line of $3.65 billion and representatives took a handful of votes to add on tens of millions of dollars more, much of it earmarked for local programs and projects, through four mega-amendments compiled outside of public view based on the 1,126 individual amendments filed earlier in the week.

– More from the Boston Herald’s Amy Sokolow: “Of those [additional] funds, $6.25 million went toward the drug and homelessness crisis at Boston’s Mass and Cass, including $2.5 million for ‘infrastructure safety improvements’ in the area … [and] $1.5 million will go toward the City of Boston for coordination teams for triage treatment and support services.

– “OTR: Massachusetts Rep. Jon Santiago on future workings between City Hall, State House,” by Ed Harding and Janet Wu, WCVB: “The Massachusetts state representative discusses whether there is a chance to institute rent control in Boston or make the MBTA free.

VAX-ACHUSETTS

– “Hundreds of Massachusetts state workers have been suspended or lost jobs due to vaccine mandate,” by Nik DeCosta-Klipa, Boston.com: “State officials released data Friday showing that 39,197 — or nearly 94 percent — of Executive Branch employees got the vaccine or received an exemption by the Oct. 17 deadline. … According to Baker’s office, 11 state workers were fired and 130 voluntarily resigned because they did not want to get the vaccine. Another 362 workers are currently suspended — the first disciplinary step — for non-compliance. And then there’s about 5 percent of workers who remain in a bit of a gray zone.

FROM THE HUB

 “Boston ready to begin Methadone Mile tent-removal process, officials say as multiple initiatives get moving,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “Multiple initiatives around Mass and Cass are moving ahead, as the city begins to notice people about tent removals, the trial court sets up to begin its ‘community response’ sessions there on Monday and prosecutors mull using more ‘stay-away’ orders for people charged with crimes.

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

– FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Former Gov. Deval Patrick has endorsed David Halbert for Boston City Council at-large, per his campaign. “As a public servant, community leader, and father, David Halbert understands the value of community,” Patrick said in a statement. “I saw how he lived those values when he served in my administration.” Patrick has also endorsed Wu for mayor.

– FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Bay State Stonewall Democrats members have voted unanimously to endorse Wu for mayor, per the group.

– “New Balance chair pours cash into Essaibi George super PAC as Wu moves to block ad,” by Gintautas Dumcius, Dorchester Reporter: “With the election days away, outside groups supporting Annissa Essaibi George’s mayoral bid raked in six-figure donations as Michelle Wu, Essaibi George’s rival, sought to block one of their ads from airing on television, calling it false and defamatory.

 “Boston mayoral battle turns nastier in closing weekend,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “It started out with a hug. But the Boston mayoral campaign is wrapping up with a battle over whether a sharp-pointed PAC attack ad should air, a sudden press conference slamming the front-runner and accusations of ‘Trumpian tactics.’

– More from Cotter: “What would Michelle Wu and Annissa Essaibi-George do in their first 100 days as Boston mayor?”

– “Wu, Essaibi George are spending campaign cash in two different Bostons,” by Elizabeth Koh, Boston Globe: “The two city councilors have leaned into two different Bostons: one rooted in the city’s older neighborhoods and traditional blue-collar class, the other in a younger ‘New Boston’ and communities of color.

– “US Postal Service Says No Mail-In Ballots Were Thrown Out In South Boston After Allegations,” by WBZ staff: “The United States Postal Service says no ballots were thrown out by postal workers in South Boston. On Saturday, two Boston City Councilors said they’ve received complaints from residents who have not yet received the ballots they need to vote in Tuesday’s election. Councilor Michael Flaherty said a substitute mail carrier was allegedly caught tossing ballots, affecting as many as 200 voters in Ward 6.

– “In the Boston City Council race, a four-way battle emerges for two coveted at-large seats,” by Meghan E. Irons and Tiana Woodard, Boston Globe: "...recent polls show strong support for the two incumbents, Michael Flaherty and Julia Mejia. Erin Murphy, a former Boston Public Schools teacher for more than two decades, and former City Council and State House staffer David Halbert, who both ran unsuccessfully in 2019, are locked in a tight battle for the other two seats with first-time candidates Ruthzee Louijeune, a lawyer, and Carla Monteiro, a social worker.

– “Two Democrats Locked In Bitter Battle For Boston City Council Seat In Jamaica Plain-West Roxbury,” by Sarah Betancourt, GBH News: “A City Council race that could have been a simple microcosm of Boston Democrats, split between the hard left [Kendra Hicks] and center left [Mary Tamer] — though both eschew the political label — has devolved into a political bloodbath. Racial animus, social media spats and even a divide within a local family have made a national spectacle of the race that will be decided by just tens of thousands of voters, overshadowing real policy differences in a district that’s changing rapidly.

– “For many advocates, restoring Boston’s elected School Committee is about expanding voting rights in communities of color,” by James Vaznis, Boston Globe: “Voters across Boston will be able to weigh in on a nonbinding referendum on Tuesday about whether the city should return to an elected School Committee. Boston is the only traditional school system in the state where the School Committee is appointed by the mayor and just one of a few nationwide.” The Globe’s Danny McDonald has more on Boston’s ballot questions.

– "Election officials predict low turnout for local races across Massachusetts on Tuesday," by Steve Brown, WBUR: "Voters in 55 communities across Massachusetts are slated to take part in municipal elections Tuesday. But election officials say enthusiasm in the local races, especially outside of Boston, is down considerably from a year ago..."

ON THE STUMP

– What happens when you mix Halloween and GOTV weekend? You find Wu and Essaibi George at the same events, including in Charlestown, where Wu posed for photos with costume-clad passerby and Essaibi George handed out Hershey bars and bright pink balloons with her campaign logo emblazoned on them less than a block away.

So what were the candidates' favorite childhood Halloween costumes? For Essaibi George, it was a “giant smiley face” she made with two hula hoops and felt in high school. For Wu, it was a Christmas tree that her mom made with green felt and ornament balls. She was sent to school in it, "but the ornament balls covered all of it and I just remembered I couldn’t sit down at school,” she laughed.

– “In final stretch of Boston mayoral race, candidates focus on getting out the vote,” by Emma Platoff and Stephanie Ebbert, Boston Globe: “Tens of thousands have already made their selections: 6,499 voted early, according to city tallies, and 32,937 have submitted mail-in ballots.

– WATCH: Wu and Essaibi George’s "Real Talk for Change" forums with the Boston Globe’s Meghan E. Irons and Ron Bell on BNN.

THE OPINION PAGES

– “A short but historic mayoral term: Kim Janey matters,” by JeneĆ© Osterheldt, Boston Globe: “Kim Janey never believed she’d see a Black mayor in the city of Boston, let alone hold the position herself. She couldn’t imagine it. And then Marty Walsh was called to Washington, and the seat was passed on to the City Council president: Janey. Everything changed. For her and for our city.

THE LOCAL ELECTIONS ROUNDUP

– BAKER’S BLESSING: It’s not just a super PAC affiliated with Gov. Charlie Baker that’s wading into mayor’s races. The governor himself has cut videos in support of GOP state Rep. Jim Kelcourse, who’s challenging Amesbury Mayor Kassandra Gove, and Gloucester Mayor Sefatia Romeo Theken‘s reelection bid, an aide confirmed.

Baker called Kelcourse a “dedicated, aggressive and ambitious fellow who will get it done for the people of Amesbury. Of Romeo ThekenBaker said “there’s nothing she won’t do for you folks.”

– “Email, mailer cause endorsement confusion in mayoral race,” by Taylor Ann Bradford, Gloucester Daily Times: “In an email blast sent out to the community on Friday, Mayor Sefatia Romeo Theken’s campaign team published a list titled ‘Endorsements and Supporters’ of the mayor’s reelection efforts. Two names down the list, with no label separating the endorsements from the supporters, is Congressman Seth Moulton. … Moulton’s team deny the Salem congressman is endorsing anyone in Gloucester’s mayoral race.

– “Here's how much money North Adams mayoral candidate[s] have raised and a look at where it came from,” by Greta Jochem, Berkshire Eagle: “[Jennifer Macksey] leads in fundraising, with $42,040 in total as of late October, according to Massachusetts Office of Campaign and Political Finance. [Lynette Bond] has raised $31,597. On average, donors gave $120 to Macksey and $139 to Bond. Both have received a significant amount of money from people who live outside the city."

– “Garcia, Sullivan in home stretch for Holyoke mayor,” by Dusty Christensen, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “Endorsements, last-minute campaign pitches and cash are flying around in Holyoke, where two candidates are campaigning to become the city’s first new mayor in nearly a decade.

– “In historic mayor's race, it's friend vs. friend,” by Paul Leighton, Salem News: “[Beverly Mayor Mike] Cahill and [Esther] Ngotho say they are still friends, but they now have another relationship — political opponents. Ngotho is challenging Cahill in Tuesday’s mayoral election. She is the first person of color to ever run for mayor in Beverly, a city with a Black population of less than 2%, and is the first woman to run for the office since Fran Alexander in 1981.

PARTY POLITICS

– “In Mass. state party election, court declares winner more than 600 days after voters cast ballot,” by Matt Stout, Boston Globe: “More than 600 days after voters cast their ballots, a state judge this week ordered Massachusetts’ secretary of state to certify a Republican activist as winning an intraparty election, offering a potential coda to a long, messy legal saga.

– “Former Mass. GOP Chair: Diehl Defeating Baker In Potential Primary Would Be ‘End Of The Republican Party In Massachusetts’,” by Jon Keller, WBZ: “Jennifer Nassour, the former Mass GOP chair, said it would be the ‘end of the Republican party in Massachusetts’ if Geoff Diehl defeats Gov. Charlie Baker in a potential primary election.

MARIJUANA IN MASSACHUSETTS

– “Massachusetts cannabis delivery companies are seeing demand, but say one issue is getting in the way of profitability,” by Melissa Hanson, MassLive: “Regulations from the state Cannabis Control Commission require there to be two drivers in cannabis delivery vehicles. The drivers must also wear body cameras and the vehicle must be outfitted with GPS. That rule is the biggest challenge to reaching profitability, [Christopher Fevry, the CEO and co-founder of cannabis delivery company Your Green Package, said].”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– "Everett Mayor Carlo DeMaria and city clerk trade lawsuits over corruption allegations," by Andrea Estes, Boston Globe: "They were the closest of friends until a real estate deal came between longtime Everett Mayor Carlo DeMaria and City Clerk Sergio Cornelio. Now, they’re suing each other, with Cornelio alleging that DeMaria pressured him to pay $97,000 from the sale of a property."

– “Wife of Fall River mayor in ICU after being hit by a car,” by Josh Faiola, WPRI: “Fall River Mayor Paul Coogan announced on social media that his wife, Judi, was sent to the ICU after being hit by a car while on her bike.

– “Massachusetts tenants and landlords struggle with eviction process after moratoriums end,” by Joyce Doherty, BU Statehouse Program/Standard Times: “Following the end of the state eviction moratorium in October last year and the CDC moratorium on Aug. 26, evictions are still lower than before the pandemic, according to state housing court data. While the number of eviction petitions has risen in the past few months, they have not reached pre-pandemic levels in Massachusetts.

– IN MEMORIAM: “Jerry Remy, Red Sox icon on the field and in the broadcast booth, dies at 68,” by Chad Finn, Boston Globe; "Red Sox Legends Past And Present Pay Tribute To Jerry Remy," by Logan Mullen, NESN.

WHAT ELSE YOU SHOULD BE READING

– “Vehicle rammings against protesters are on the rise, but the justice system often sides with drivers,” by Jess Bidgood, Boston Globe: “Between [George] Floyd’s death on May 25, 2020, and Sept. 30, 2021, vehicles drove into protests at least 139 times, according to an analysis completed by The Boston Globe, relying on researchers’ data, local news coverage, and the Globe’s own findings. In addition to the three deaths, vehicle rammings at protests have injured at least 100 people, the Globe found, yet in most cases the driver has gone unpunished: The Globe confirmed the existence of charges in just 65 of the cases — fewer than half of them — and found only four so far in which a driver was convicted of a felony.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to Erin Hearn of J Strategies, Molly Horan, Hannah Smith and Siri Uotila.

Want to make an impact? POLITICO Massachusetts has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Bay State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness among this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: jshapiro@politico.com.

 

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Friday, July 2, 2021

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Heat dome can’t unfreeze Biden’s climate agenda

 



 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY MICHAEL GRUNWALD

Presented by

AARP

With help from Natalie Fertig and Mona Zhang

CRUEL SUMMER — The heat wave that fricasseed the Pacific Northwest this week, along with the evocatively named Lava Fire in northern California, has inspired a lot of rhetoric about a “climate emergency.” But the newest inconvenient truth is that climate change isn’t the kind of emergency that inspires emergency action in Washington.

Most of President Joe Biden’s ambitious climate proposals were stripped out of the bipartisan infrastructure bill that he’s urging Congress to pass. And it’s not even clear whether Congress will comply.

This is partly a human nature problem. The now-focused, more-wanting, change-averse biases of our species aren’t well-suited for an all-out war against an invisible enemy that won’t kill most of us in the short term but can’t be defeated unless we transform our civilization in the not-too-long term. This week’s 116-degree nightmare in Portland, Ore., ought to remind us that we’re gradually filling our atmosphere with the same heat-trapping gases that have rendered Venus inhospitable to human life.

But most of the earth is still quite hospitable most of the time, and many of us have air conditioners for when it isn’t. We’ll freak out again this summer as wildfires rage across California, and then we’ll stop freaking out once the fires stop burning.

A thermometer sign displays a temperature of 117 degrees Fahrenheit on June 15 in Phoenix.

A thermometer sign displays a temperature of 117 degrees Fahrenheit on June 15 in Phoenix. | Caitlin O'Hara/Getty Images

The fact is, even though many of us acknowledge the climate is in crisis, few of us live with a real crisis mentality, as if we truly believed our planetary home was on fire. We’re busy. We’re not going on #ClimateStrike with Greta Thunberg. We don’t like thinking about the enormousness of the crisis, and we don’t like the screechy apocalyptic rhetoric surrounding it. We default to the blasĆ© reaction lampooned in the classic Onion headline: “Yeah, Yeah, Nation Gets It, We Rapidly Approaching End of Critical Window to Avert Climate Collapse or Whatever.”

But this is why we ordinary citizens outsource our crisis-response responsibilities to elected representatives, who are supposed to deal with urgent threats to our civilization whether or not most of their constituents are screeching for action. Their failure to do that is not just an existential human-nature problem. It’s also a prosaic Washington problem.

The problem is that Biden doesn’t have the votes he needs for all the climate action he wants. Most Washington Republicans either don’t want to give Biden a win in a zero-sum partisan war, reject climate science, aren’t willing to risk the wrath of climate-science-rejecting voters, or some combination of those factors.

Five Republican senators were willing to support a stripped-down infrastructure bill that included generous funding for public transit and electric-vehicle chargers, but not massive wind and solar subsidies, tax credits for electric-vehicle buyers, and other climate provisions.

Biden has said he plans to fight for the rest of his climate agenda, including a strict clean electricity mandate, in a separate reconciliation bill that would require only Democratic support. But it’s not clear how much of that agenda the quasi-deputy-president Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia will accept.

The young climate activists of the Sunrise Movement have been protesting outside the White House, calling Biden a coward, screaming “No Compromises, No Excuses.” But not having the votes in your own party’s Senate caucus to avoid a compromise is a pretty good excuse.

Washington enacted $6 trillion worth of Covid relief, proving that it’s capable of responding to an emergency that was killing thousands of Americans every day. Climate change has never been treated like that kind of emergency. Time Magazine called for a war on global warming with a green-bordered cover in 2008, but we never went to war. Bloomberg BusinessWeek ran a wake-up cover declaring “It’s Global Warming, Stupid” after Hurricane Sandy in 2012. Record-shattering heat in Seattle might be another wake-up call. The last seven years were the seven hottest years in recorded history.

One illuminating battle in the current infrastructure wars involves “pay-fors,” as Republicans push for the infrastructure bill to be paid for in part by new user fees on electric vehicle owners. They’re not just trying to impose a political tax on electric cars that they see as a Democratic form of transportation favored by rich urban progressives; they also make the legitimate substantive argument that electric-vehicle drivers are literal “free riders” who contribute to the wear and tear on U.S. highways without paying the gasoline taxes that help finance highway maintenance.

But when it comes to the greenhouse-gas-emitting activities that are making the earth a bit more like Venus every day, we’re all free riders. The big problem with America’s fossil-friendly public policies since the Industrial Revolution is that they haven’t imposed user fees on us for contributing to the wear and tear on our atmosphere — by flying, eating meat, and especially these days, running our air conditioners.

The whole point of climate policies like clean energy subsidies or Biden’s clean electricity standard or a carbon tax or Obama’s cap-and-trade proposal is to encourage us to pay a user fee for our use of the atmosphere, creating a financial incentive to reduce our impact on the environment. But it’s going to be tough to pass those kinds of policies until our politicians act like the emergency is real.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. We won’t be publishing on Monday, July 5. But we’ll be back and better than ever Tuesday, July 6. Reach out with news, tips and ideas for us at mgrunwald@politico.com, or on Twitter at @MikeGrunwald.

A message from AARP:

Millions of family caregivers are struggling to provide care for their older parents and spouses. Many are sacrificing their income, tapping into life savings, and taking on debt to keep their loved ones safe—at home and out of nursing homes that could put their lives at risk. Family caregivers are reaching their breaking point. Congress must pass the Credit for Caring Act now to give caregivers some of the relief they desperately need. Learn more.

 
WHAT'D I MISS?

— U.S. job gains surge, easing pressure on Biden over labor market: The U.S. economy added 850,000 jobs in June, a strong showing after two disappointing months of employment growth that had sparked criticism from Republicans that the Biden administration was stifling a labor market revival. The report from the Labor Department marked a significant improvement over May’s 583,000 net job gain and beat Wall Street expectations of about 700,000. The unemployment rate was little changed at 5.9 percent.

— Biden nixes Trump-era drama as he welcomes World Champion Dodgers to White House: Biden welcomed the Los Angeles Dodgers to the White House today to celebrate their 2020 World Series win with a cheerful ceremony that represented a stark departure from the heavily politicized gatherings of professional sports teams under former President Donald Trump. Speaking from the East Room in an event attended by Vice President Kamala Harris and second gentleman Douglas Emhoff, Biden said the Dodgers were “a lot more than a baseball club” — describing the championship-winning team as “a pillar of American culture and American progress,” and invoking the barrier-breaking Brooklyn Dodger Jackie Robinson.

— Climate scientists take swipe at Exxon Mobil, industry in leaked report: A recently leaked draft report written by some of the world’s top climate scientists blamed disinformation and lobbying campaigns — including by Exxon Mobil — for undermining government efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and increasing the dangers of global warming to society. The draft report, which has been reviewed by POLITICO and other news organizations in recent days, is part of an upcoming review of climate science by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a body that brings together scientists from around the globe to examine the state of climate research. The draft dedicates part of its North America section to public “resistance to climate change science.”

 

SUBSCRIBE TO WEST WING PLAYBOOK: Add West Wing Playbook to keep up with the power players, latest policy developments and intriguing whispers percolating inside the West Wing and across the highest levels of the Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
AROUND THE WORLD

1975 OR 1989? The situation in Afghanistan is grim. An occupying army is withdrawing its last troops, bombs are besieging Kabul and the country appears on the verge of a civil war. U.S. diplomats believe they can’t count on the shaky Afghan government to survive, much less protect them.

It’s Jan. 30, 1989, two weeks until the last Soviet forces leave, and U.S. officials have just closed the American Embassy in Kabul, while promising “the United States will return.” But they wouldn’t reopen the diplomatic mission until January 2002, after the U.S. came back to Afghanistan with its own troops to topple the Taliban regime.

Today, the future of the U.S. Embassy in Kabul is once again in doubt. The last U.S. troops have left Bagram air base, the sprawling compound that has been the epicenter of the U.S. military presence there for the last two decades. And by the standards of an embassy “Emergency Action Plan,” parts of which were seen by POLITICO, U.S. diplomats already face a dire situation likely to worsen as a resurgent Taliban takes on a weak Afghan government, Nahal Toosi and Lara Seligman write.

Some U.S. intelligence estimates reportedly project that the government in Kabul could fall in as little as six months after the U.S. withdrawal, which could be finished in days. On a visit to Washington last month, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani said his country faces an “1861 moment,” a reference to the dawn of the U.S. Civil War.

 

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CANNABIS

GREEN LEAF OR GOLD MEDAL? Cannabis reporters Natalie Fertig and Mona Zhang email Nightly:

Cannabis has been approved for medical or recreational use by voters or legislatures in 37 states, but using it can still get you removed from the U.S. Olympic team. That’s what happened to sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson: after testing positive for marijuana during a random drug test, Richardson had her Olympic trial result voided today and was suspended from competition for one month.

“I think there’s a symbolism here, that the person who is testing positive is a woman of color,” said John Hudak, an expert in cannabis policy at the Brookings Institution and a contributor to a cannabis industry-funded cannabis policy think tank. “I think it sums up the drug war.”

The entire prohibited substances program for sports originated out of the U.S.-led war on drugs in the late ’60s, said Maxwell Mehlman, a law professor and bioethicist at Case Western Reserve University. Marijuana was placed on the list in 1998 due to White House pressure.

“Basically, the White House said, ‘We will not fund [the World Anti-Doping Agency] and [the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency] unless you put [marijuana] on the list to help us on the anti-drug program,” Mehlman said. “Not because of any performance enhancement concerns.”

Barry McCaffrey, Office of National Drug Control Policy director during the Clinton administration, said he had no recollection of pressuring WADA to prohibit marijuana, and that the agency’s focus was on drugs like steroids and human growth hormones. According to WADA, the International Olympic Committee oversaw the banned substances list until 2004.

Sha'Carri Richardson runs and celebrates in the Women's 100 Meter semifinal on day 2 of the  U.S. Olympic Track & Field Team Trials at Hayward Field on June 19 in Eugene, Ore.

Sha'Carri Richardson runs and celebrates in the Women's 100 Meter semifinal on day 2 of the U.S. Olympic Track & Field Team Trials at Hayward Field on June 19 in Eugene, Ore. | Patrick Smith/Getty Images

Substances on WADA’s banned list do not necessarily correlate with international drug laws. Pseudoephedrine, an active ingredient in many over-the-counter cold medicines, is on WADA’s banned list, but is not a scheduled substance. A Romanian gymnast was stripped of her gold medal in 2000 after testing positive for it.

The changes to state drug laws in America have prompted many pro sports leagues like the MLB, NFL and NHL to loosen their cannabis policies. But so far, there hasn’t been any movement on the issue within WADA.

The science: Tetrahydrocannabinol — or THC — is the main psychoactive component within cannabis, and it is on the list of the World Anti-Doping Agency’s banned substances. WADA’s prohibited substances list treats marijuana as a performance enhancing drug, but also as a “substance of abuse.”

“Their rationale for considering it a performance-enhancing drug is a bit of a mystery to me,” said Margaret Haney, director of the Cannabis Research Laboratory at Columbia University.

Cannabis can reduce anxiety and help manage pain — two things athletes deal with — but Haney said she can’t think of how it would improve running performance.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, people under the influence of cannabis typically perform worse, not better, said Deepak D’Souza, a psychiatrist and Yale researcher who studies cannabis.

Drug testing itself is also flawed, D’Souza and Haney both said. Urine, blood and even saliva drug tests cannot accurately indicate if someone is high during the race, or just has used cannabis recently.

The response from Congress was swift. Republican Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz said he opposes Richardson’s suspension . And Reps. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.) and Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), two co-chairs of the bipartisan Congressional Cannabis Caucus, told POLITICO today they are circulating a letter to the USADA, requesting that it reconsider the policy on cannabis.

“It’s clearly hypocritical that alcohol, which has scientific evidence proving harm to people’s bodies, is exempt from that same list of banned substances,” Lee told POLITICO.

The White House, meanwhile, refused to comment on the suspension. Office of National Drug Control Policy Acting Director Regina LaBelle is a member of WADA’s primary decision-making body, the Foundation Board. ONDCP in May asked WADA to make a series of reforms following the Russian doping scandal.

Biden’s White House came under fire earlier this year for dismissing or suspending dozens of staffers who had admitted to prior marijuana use.

 

SUBSCRIBE TO "THE RECAST" TODAY: Power is shifting in Washington and in communities across the country. More people are demanding a seat at the table, insisting that politics is personal and not all policy is equitable. The Recast is a twice-weekly newsletter that explores the changing power dynamics in Washington and breaks down how race and identity are recasting politics and policy in America. Get fresh insights, scoops and dispatches on this crucial intersection from across the country and hear critical new voices that challenge business as usual. Don't miss out, SUBSCRIBE . Thank you to our sponsor, Intel.

 
 
FROM THE HEALTH DESK

THE SUMMER WAVE — In this morning’s POLITICO Pro Pulse State Health Care newsletter, Dan Goldberg dove into where in the U.S. Covid is making a resurgence. An excerpt:

Arkansas, Iowa, Missouri and Nevada are all reporting at least a 20 percent jump in coronavirus hospitalizations over the last two weeks as the Delta variant wreaks havoc across the Midwest and Southwest, where the summer heat is pushing people indoors.

We saw something similar last summer when states like Arizona and Utah were rocked by Covid. Those states are seeing a huge spike in cases — albeit from a relatively low baseline. Nearly half the states are now reporting an increase in cases.

What to watch for: In the near term, keep an eye on places like Harris County, Texas, and Maricopa County, Ariz. Both have vaccinated about 40 percent of their population, which trails the national average. Both were hit hard last year by Covid, which could mean in theory they have some more protection via natural immunity. If cases in those areas spike again it could prove a difficult summer for much of the Southwest, where many counties have far less protection from the vaccine.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

2,147,090

The number of people screened at U.S. airport security checkpoints nationwide on Thursday, according to TSA spokesperson Lisa Farbstein. The number is larger than 2019’s total for the same day, 2,088,760.

PUNCHLINES

GO FOURTH! Matt Wuerker is in a holiday mood as he brings us the Weekend Wrap of the week’s best political cartoons and satire, including the New York mayoral race counting issues, the ongoing Western heat wave and Biden’s legislative push on infrastructure.

Punchlines Weekend Wrap with Matt Wuerker

PARTING WORDS

Nightly asked you: After a year of surges, vaccines and variants, we wanted to know: How are you celebrating the Fourth of July this year? Is the pandemic still affecting your usual plans? Your select, lightly edited responses are below:

“Before the pandemic, our family celebrated with extended family and friends in true Midwestern style — a picnic lunch with home-cooked foods, homemade ice cream and lawn darts. Last year, our immediate family got together outside, socially distanced and masked, for a low-key celebration. This year, my immediate family (all fully vaccinated) rented a cabin in the mountains where we will celebrate together in semi-isolation with good food, some hiking and fishing, and s’mores.” — Conny Moody, revenue policy manager, Springfield, Ill.

“We are having a celebration almost as big as pre-pandemic, but with an extended group of family and friends in which all adults are fully vaccinated. I think we would have hesitated if most of our family had not been vaccinated.”  Catherine Palazola, retired, Memphis, Tenn.

“The pandemic affects our plans because we have an 8-year-old who can’t be vaccinated. We wear masks whenever indoors with folks outside our immediate family. Out here in the west, the drought is also affecting our plans with the Jackson fireworks being canceled because of fire danger.” — Jeff Brown, strategic adviser, Jackson, Wyo.

“Before the pandemic, I would’ve gone to a cookout surrounded by 50 of my closest family, friends and distant relatives. This year, it seems only right to spend July Fourth with close family members that I haven’t seen over the last year. The pandemic was a stark reminder that time with family is precious and fleeting.”  Beth Lemmonds, program compliance specialist, Lexington, S.C.

“I’m fully vaccinated, so the pandemic doesn’t play a large role in my decision to spend the holiday at home. The high excessive heat dome sitting over the inland Pacific Northwest does, since it’s an immediate threat, as are wildfires, because of the prolonged drought. No fireworks and no outside gatherings of friends.”  Helen Goerke, retired, Canyon County, Idaho

“I’ll be celebrating the Fourth of July — which is also my birthday — by camping with my lovely family on Cape Cod’s National Seashore.” — Elizabeth Carty, nonprofit manager, Newton, Mass.

“We are staying at home, staying away from the county ‘Freedom Fest’ because vaccination rates here are unfortunately very low, and although I am vaccinated we are still very much at risk in this community.” — William Melahn, chief medical officer, Morehead, Ky.

A message from AARP:

Family Caregivers Need Help Now

Caring for loved ones shouldn’t lead to bankruptcy and financial ruin. But that is exactly what is happening for too many family caregivers. The financial strain of caregiving is immense, and it is unacceptable that more isn’t being done to provide support for them. That’s why AARP is fighting for America’s 48 million family caregivers and their loved ones who depend on their care to survive. Family caregivers nationwide spend over one-quarter of their income, on average, providing this essential care. Congress must pass the Credit for Caring Act to help alleviate some of the financial strain of caregiving.

Tell Congress to act now to help protect family caregivers from financial devastation. Tell Congress to pass the Credit for Caring Act.

 

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