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Showing posts with label COVID MITIGATION. Show all posts
Showing posts with label COVID MITIGATION. Show all posts

Thursday, February 10, 2022

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook:

 



 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

FACE OFF — Gov. Charlie Baker’s decision to let the state’s school mask mandate expire on Feb. 28 drew swift rebukes from teachers unions and a handful of Democratic lawmakers, and mixed reactions from parents and medical experts.

Those opposed to Baker’s move pointed to lagging statewide vaccination rates among children ages 5 to 11 compared to other age groups, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance that still recommends kids mask up in schools. Massachusetts Teachers Association President Merrie Najimy said state officials are “throwing caution to the wind” by lifting the requirement right as students return from school vacation week.

But some medical experts argued that with Covid-19 cases and wastewater data trending down, it’s OK to offer a masking reprieve. The Archdiocese of Boston quickly said it would eliminate mask mandates in its schools after February break; 42 schools already had approval from the state to end masking ahead of Baker’s announcement.

Baker’s decision comes  as blue-state governors across the country relax their mask rules. Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont is targeting the same date as Baker to ease his school mask mandate; the governors of Rhode Island, New Jersey and Delaware intend to follow suit in March.

School districts here are now grappling with whether students and faculty should mask up or down. As they deliberate , Glenn Koocher, executive director of the Massachusetts Association of School Committees, warned that school board meetings could grow contentious.

“The parents who have always supported masking, which is the vast majority, may not be comfortable unmasking all the kids. The anti-maskers, who are a small but extremely vocal faction, will want the masks taken off immediately,” Koocher told Playbook. “When it kicks back to the local level, it can be kicking local school board members in the behind from the perpetually disgruntled.”

GOOD THURSDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. The candidates running to replace Baker are also split over the governor’s latest mask move.

Republicans Chris Doughty and former state Rep. Geoff Diehl cheered the pending expiration as a win for parents.

Democrat Sonia Chang-Díaz decried it as “premature.” The state senator’s campaign said she would decide whether to let students and staff go maskless on a county-by-county basis, because the CDC tracks transmission by county.

Playbook asked if that meant schools in Lowell would be held to the same standard as Somerville and Ashland, all of which are in Middlesex County; or if schools in Lawrence and Rockport, both in Essex County, would be treated the same. Chang-Díaz’s campaign replied that she wouldn’t rule out using other geographic boundaries in the future, but would start at the county level.

Harvard professor Danielle Allen again cited March 7 as her preferred date, to allow time to monitor the effects of February break. State Attorney General Maura Healey’s campaign declined comment.

TODAY — Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito visits Chicopee Academy at 12:30 p.m. and makes a grant announcement in Springfield at 2 p.m. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu makes a budget announcement with city councilors at 11 a.m. at City Hall.

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 still working on it.

 

HAPPENING TODAY – A LONG GAME CONVERSATION ON THE CLIMATE CRISIS : Join POLITICO for back-to-back conversations on climate and sustainability action, starting with a panel led by Global Insider author Ryan Heath focused on insights gleaned from our POLITICO/Morning Consult Global Sustainability Poll of citizens from 13 countries on five continents about how their governments should respond to climate change. Following the panel, join a discussion with POLITICO White House Correspondent Laura Barrón-López and Gina McCarthy, White House national climate advisor, about the Biden administration’s climate and sustainability agenda. REGISTER HERE.

 
 
ON THE STUMP

— DEMPSEY STOPS BY THE HORSE RACE: With campaign season in full swing, The Horse Race is interviewing candidates for statewide office. Auditor hopeful and former Transportation for Massachusetts director Chris Dempsey joined the podcast this week to discuss his plans for auditing the state police, the MBTA and how federal aid is being spent. Here are excerpts from his interview, and check out the full episode:

On his proposed state police audit:  “We’re looking at everything from the hiring process, to the promotion process, to the way they handle public records, to the way they handle evidence, to issues and complaints around racial profiling with people being pulled over and issued tickets. … [This is] a deeper dive in many ways and we cover a broader range of issues than the Legislature has addressed in the past.”

On the T:  “I think it surprises some people to learn that the auditor’s office has a team dedicated to the MBTA. … We need to be focused on some of these larger projects and procurements that are really concerning in terms of their time delays and cost overruns [including the new Red and Orange line cars].”

THE LATEST NUMBERS

— “Massachusetts reports 2,794 new coronavirus cases, COVID-19 hospitalizations keep falling,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The state Department of Public Health on Wednesday reported 2,794 daily coronavirus cases, a 44% drop from last Wednesday’s total of 4,973 infections. The state’s average percent positivity is now 4.08%, significantly down from the rate of 23% in early January. The positive test average for Wednesday’s count was 2.87%.”

DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “Massachusetts State House locked down after protesters enter building during Baker press conference,” by Sahar Fatima and Tonya Alanez, Boston Globe: “The Massachusetts State House was locked down after people protesting vaccine mandates entered the building during Governor Charlie Baker’s press conference announcing the state was lifting school mask mandates. The State House has been closed to the public since earlier in the pandemic. Some protesters could be heard chanting, ‘Open the State House to the people.’ … [One of the protesters] is among a group of people who have also been protesting outside Mayor Michelle Wu’s home in Roslindale against Boston’s vaccine mandate for city employees.”

— “Gov. Charlie Baker opposes vaccine mandate at Massachusetts State House,” by Alison Kuznitz, MassLive: “Gov. Charlie Baker on Wednesday said he does not support a broad vaccine mandate at the Massachusetts State House, which has been closed to the public for 701 consecutive days due to the COVID-19 pandemic. But Senate President Karen Spilka and House Speaker Ron Mariano are likely to incorporate a proof of vaccination requirement into their strategy for finally reopening the State House.”

— “Report Backs Moving City Elections Alongside State Ones,” by Chris Lisinski, State House News Service (paywall): “In a new report published Wednesday, leaders of MassVOTE contended that Bay State communities could ‘dramatically boost voter turnout rates’ in municipal contests by moving them alongside the biennial statewide elections in even years.”

— “Governor Charlie Baker to release first book,” by Matt Stout, Boston Globe: “Governor Charlie Baker will add a new title before he leaves office next year: author. In May, the second-term Republican will release his first book, “Results: Getting Beyond Politics to Get Important Work Done,” a 300-page ‘implementation guide’ he wrote with his former chief of staff, Steve Kadish, according to Baker’s office and an online summary. The book, which is being published by Harvard Business Review Press, is expected to draw on both Baker’s nearly two terms in office and his time in the private sector, but it is not described as a memoir.”

VAX-ACHUSETTS

— “Coronavirus levels continue to decline in Eastern Mass. waste water,” by Martin Finucane and Ryan Huddle, Boston Globe: “The amount of coronavirus detected in sewage from communities in the MWRA’s southern region is now less than one-18th of what it was when the surge peaked early this year, while the amount detected in sewage from the northern region is less than one-15th of what it was at its peak.”

— “Boston’s top hospital execs ‘not ready to learn to live with’ COVID-19,” by Amy Sokolow, Boston Herald: “CEOs from three of Boston’s top hospitals — Boston Children’s, Beth Israel Lahey and Mass General Brigham — generally agreed during a roundtable discussion that they’re not yet ready for a return to normal.”

— “So far, Mass. residents have barely filed for COVID test reimbursements from insurers. Here's why,” by Gabrielle Emanuel, WBUR: “New numbers suggest that so far only a small percentage of Massachusetts residents have taken advantage of a new federal program that requires private insurers to cover the cost of rapid COVID tests. In response to a request from WBUR, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts reported roughly 0.5% of its eligible members filed for reimbursement for the tests between January 15, when the program went live, and the end of that month.”

 

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FROM THE HUB

— “Boston city councilors call hearing over ongoing public health emergency,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “City Councilors Frank Baker and Erin Murphy introduced a hearing order for an in-person session about the fact that the city’s public health declarations remain in effect for the pandemic. … [Baker said] Mayor Michelle Wu’s administration has ‘not been paying attention to business needs’ and potentially has put a thumb on the scale of collective bargaining with the city’s mandates to require all employees to get the jab and many businesses to require patrons to provide proof of vaccination.”

— More: “In ongoing COVID-19 vaccine mandate battle, frictions emerge between council and Wu,” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “The stalemate between Mayor Michelle Wu and municipal labor unions over her COVID-19 vaccination mandate is sparking political pushback from a source close to the mayor’s heart: the Boston City Council.”

— “New Black Mothers Peace Initiative to argue for police in ‘vulnerable’ Boston schools,” by Flint McColgan, Boston Herald: “Children are left without needed police protection against violence in Boston schools, community members argued at a tense community meeting in Dorchester. Their complaints and hope for change is embodied in a new group — Black Mothers Peace Initiative.”

— “In Boston’s District 4, new councilor Brian Worrell wrestles with police reform questions,” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “Worrell represents one of the city’s most diverse districts, with more than 90 percent residents of color, yet he also received the backing of the city’s largest police union in his campaign last year. It’s a dichotomy that comes amid a police reform discourse filled with uncompromising talking points. Yet his views on police reform, and the delicate political balance they strike, point to the complexities of the debate that often get lost or ignored in the public debate.”

— “Boston residents want to become notaries, DJs, according to Google,” by Amy Sokolow, Boston Herald: “Who wants to be a notary? How about a DJ? Apparently quite a few people in Massachusetts, according to a new Google Trends report on job searches in the Bay State.”

PARTY POLITICS

— “Masked intruder threatens Massachusetts Republican staffers at party headquarters,” by Joe Dwinell, Boston Herald: “A crazed intruder in a pink mask stomped into the MassGOP office in Woburn, calling staffers and volunteers ‘fascists’ before threatening to ‘come back with a weapon’ in an unhinged outburst police are investigating. No arrests were announced Wednesday night, but Woburn police told the Herald the man’s ‘mental health’ is part of the probe.”

CAMPAIGN ROUNDUP

— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Iron Workers Local 7 has endorsed state Sen. Diana DiZoglio for state auditor, per her campaign.

— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Tania Del Rio has added Mark Guiterrez as field director for her campaign for Boston City Council District 1. Luisa Peña Lyons, Rep. Ayanna Pressley’s former political director, also joins Del Rio’s team as an advisor.

— “Former state senator to challenge Lori Trahan in midterms,” by Jacob Vitali, Lowell Sun: “[Dean] Tran is looking to make his comeback. He said he is committed to showing people he is transparent and didn’t act unethically intentionally. He also said the incumbent hasn’t been without her own ethical concerns.”

Former state Sen. Dean Tran kicks off campaign for Congress, alleges racism in ethics report


— “YWCA's Robyn Kennedy forms committee to run for seat held by Harriette Chandler of Worcester,” by Marco Cartolano, Worcester Telegram & Gazette: “YWCA executive Robyn K. Kennedy has filed paperwork with the state indicating her intention to run for the Senate seat vacated by Harriette L. Chandler and she said she will make an announcement about her plans in the coming days.”

 Daniel Higgins, Melissa Alden join four-way race to replace District Attorney Michael O'Keefe,” by Rachael Devaney, Cape Cod Times: “Daniel Higgins, assistant district attorney for the Cape and Islands District Attorney’s office; and Melissa Alden, a former Yarmouth police officer and current family and elder law attorney, will announce their campaigns this week, joining criminal defense attorney Robert Galibois and Republican John ‘Jack’ Carey, of East Sandwich, who announced their campaigns in January.”

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “Mayor Michelle Wu’s push for free buses is spurring other cities and towns to act,” by Taylor Dolven, Boston Globe: “Riders of the 23, 28, and 29 buses, which run through Mattapan, Dorchester, and Roxbury, will not be charged any fares starting in March, a first step, Mayor Michelle Wu hopes, toward making the T free. … As Wu handed out fliers about the free service in three languages at businesses in Grove Hall on Wednesday, other cities and towns surrounding Boston were moving forward with plans to make MBTA bus lines in their areas free, too.”

FROM THE DELEGATION

From the opinion pages: "My miscarriage was crushing. Overturning Roe could make the ordeal even worse," by Assistant House Speaker Katherine Clark, Boston Globe: "If there were bounty hunters when I suffered a miscarriage, would my routine surgery have been readily available to me? Certainly not."

— “Markey, Warren, Moulton lean on GE to bring back work to Lynn,” by Jon Chesto, Boston Globe: “After General Electric decided to move some work from its jet-engine plant in Lynn to other factories — including some overseas — the politicians who represent the North Shore city in Congress are pushing back.”

IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

— “Peabody awarded sensors to monitor pollution,” by Paul Leighton, Salem News: “When residents opposed to a planned new peaker power plant began looking for data on air pollution in Peabody, they soon discovered a concerning fact — there is none. … That void is about to be filled. The city of Peabody, in partnership with Breathe Clean North Shore, was recently awarded seven air sensors through a program run by the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection. … Peabody is one of 39 communities that will receive a total of 292 air sensors, according to MassDEP.”

FROM THE 413

— “Protestors seek end to monkey research at UMass,” by Scott Merzbach, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “Inside a building at the University of Massachusetts, laboratory experiments on marmoset monkeys are continuing, despite occasional protests by animal rights organizations that have targeted this work.”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “Susan M. Collins becomes first woman of color to lead Boston Federal Reserve Bank,” by Larry Edelman, Boston Globe: “Susan M. Collins, a Harvard- and MIT-trained economist with extensive experience in government and academia, will be the next president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, the first woman of color selected to lead one of the 12 regional Fed branches since the central bank system was created in 1914.”

— “Harvard professors drop support for colleague accused of sexual harassment,” by Laura Krantz, Boston Globe: “Nearly all of the Harvard professors who signed a letter of support for their colleague John Comaroff have removed their names, saying Wednesday that their signatures were a grievous error in light of new allegations of sexual harassment levied against him.”

— “As major seafood watch list weighs ‘red-listing’ lobster, Mass. lobstermen push back,” by Walter Wuthmann, WBUR: “A popular seafood ranking guide is considering ‘red listing’ American lobster and other New England fisheries for the danger they pose to endangered North Atlantic right whales. … But Massachusetts lobstermen are pushing back on the description of their industry as unsustainable.”

— “Report: Fewer opioids being prescribed in Mass.,” by Christian M. Wade, CNHI/Newburyport Daily News: “Massachusetts had the lowest opioid prescription rate in New England in 2020, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported. Health care providers in the Bay State wrote 33.3 opioid prescriptions for every 100 residents, the federal agency reported.”

— “Obama portraits heading to Boston this fall,” by Malcolm Gay, Boston Globe: “This September, the Museum of Fine Arts will present the portraits of former President Barack Obama and Michelle Obama, one of just two museums selected to extend ‘The Obama Portraits Tour,’ a traveling exhibition of the works by acclaimed artists Kehinde Wiley and Amy Sherald.”

MEDIA MATTERS

— THE GLOBE’S LANDER DISCLAIMER: Eric Lander, President Joe Biden’s top science adviser who announced his resignation this week after my POLITICO colleagues reported that he bullied subordinates, wrote columns for the Boston Globe and Washington Post last summer encouraging people to get vaccinated — without disclosing that he had a financial stake in BioNTech SE, the German company that partnered with Pfizer on a Covid-19 vaccine, Max Tani and Alex Thompson write in. After Thompson published a story on Lander’s vaccine-maker stock, the Globe added an addendum.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to former state Senate Ways and Means chair Stephen Brewer; the Boston Globe’s Jeff Jacoby; Nolan O’Brien, Christopher Hartman, Peter Douvris, Jess Arena and Jonathan Pappas.

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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Lisa Kashinsky @lisakashinsky

 

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POLITICO NIGHTLY: Covid restrictions the experts would end right now

 


 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY MYAH WARD

A bar in the French Quarter in New Orleans.

A bar in the French Quarter in New Orleans. | Mario Tama/Getty Images

BREAKING THE PLEXIGLASS — The Blue Pause, which began Monday when New Jersey set a date for lifting its school mask mandate, continued today, with announcements that mask mandates in public schools in Denver, as well as the entire states of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, would end in the coming weeks. Connecticut, New Jersey and Delaware were already there. New York is keeping masks in schools for now, but announced today that the mandate for businesses ends this week. California is enacting a similar policy.

Some public health experts think it’s too soon to celebrate, but most agree that a whole bunch of Covid mitigation measures, many of them introduced in March 2020, seem to have become unnecessarily permanent — from plexiglass barriers in restaurants to the elimination of housekeeping and buffets at hotels to ostentatious “deep cleaning” protocols on airlines. Nightly asked our roster of go-to public health experts what mitigation measures they would end right now, as the U.S. enters a Covid lull. These answers have been edited.

“A mitigation measure I would end immediately is restricting visitors to patients who are near end-of-life with Covid-19. We know that many of these patients are actually in the inflammatory state of the disease and are likely at very low risk of transmitting to others around them. It is important that family members get to visit and be near their loved ones. And, if there is any concern the patient could still be contagious (such as may be the case with some who are immunocompromised), family members can be equipped with N95 masks. By keeping family members away from patients who may not be contagious, we are causing unnecessary harm and grief.” — Abraar Karan, infectious disease fellow at Stanford University

“I would immediately end the risk averseness of universities. Many universities and colleges have vaccine — and booster — requirements, yet still cling to aggressive masking, social distancing, and testing policies with no off-ramps. College students are low-risk for severe disease and having them fully vaccinated should be sufficient to ensure the resiliency of universities to what will be an ever present virus.” — Amesh Adalja, senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Institute for Health Security

Plexiglass barriers and digital menus should have been dropped a long time ago — we’ve known for more than a year that they’re useless. Outdoor masking is similarly pointless (unless you’re in a very small, crowded area). Although I wouldn’t relax any mitigation measures today, I am looking forward to most of us being able to spend time together without masks, indoors, and to enjoy restaurants without fear of catching Covid, in the weeks to come. I am also looking forward to rapid-testing-before-a-get-together being less necessary (especially for those of us who are vaccinated) in the very near future.

“I will continue to use MyCOVIDRisk.app to help me judge the risk of infection, based on local case numbers and vaccination status!” — Megan Ranney, emergency physician and professor at Brown University

“I think right now, we have to be cautious because of the uncertainty around the BA.2 sub variant. Although Omicron is decelerating quickly, BA.2 could drag this out for another six weeks or more. So we’re at Omicron and mask ‘Groundhog Day’: If Omicron continues its downward trajectory, then mask restrictions can lift by the new target dates set by many of the governors. But if BA.2 gains a foothold, we’re looking at six or more weeks of Covid winter.” — Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine and co-director of the Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Development

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Keep reading for more ideas for Covid measures that should be scrapped from our panel of experts. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at mward@politico.com, or on Twitter at @MyahWard.

 

HAPPENING THURSDAY – A LONG GAME CONVERSATION ON THE CLIMATE CRISIS : Join POLITICO for back-to-back conversations on climate and sustainability action, starting with a panel led by Global Insider author Ryan Heath focused on insights gleaned from our POLITICO/Morning Consult Global Sustainability Poll of citizens from 13 countries on five continents about how their governments should respond to climate change. Following the panel, join a discussion with POLITICO White House Correspondent Laura Barrón-López and Gina McCarthy, White House national climate advisor, about the Biden administration’s climate and sustainability agenda. REGISTER HERE.

 
 

“Like masks themselves, there’s no one-size-fits-all for mask mandates and the timing of tightening or loosening requirements. The best practice is to adjust mask mandates and other measures per the burden of cases and hospitalizations in each area. We’re all sick of the virus, but it’s still important to listen, look at the data, and then make decisions accordingly. Although cases are declining fast, cases and hospitalizations are still high in most of the country. If we prematurely lift lifesaving and disease-restraining measures, we will prolong the flood.

“The United States is better defended against Covid now than ever in the past two years. We can have the upper hand over the virus as long as we adapt our response and use multilayered and strong defenses, starting with vaccine-based immunity, and strengthened with measures such as masks. Even without mandates, people who are feeling sick, those who are medically vulnerable, and anyone who feels more comfortable doing so should feel free to mask up. No one can know what’s coming next.” — Tom Frieden, former CDC director and president and CEO of Resolve to Save Lives, a global public health initiative 

“I would immediately end digital menus in restaurants, members of the service industry wearing rubber gloves, and deep cleaning anywhere, as Covid is not spread by fomites and such measures spread unnecessary fear (and are non-scientific). I would also end temperature screening, as Covid can spread when asymptomatic. Because masks provide one-way protection, some states are ending mask mandates now or can go on a hospitalization metric. Non-pharmaceutical interventions were always meant to protect our hospitals. One standardized metric is to drop mask mandates when hospitals in the region are at <80 percent ICU capacity (a marker for severe Covid disease which corresponds to vaccination rates in the region) as can be determined by the HHS hospital utilization website.” — Monica Gandhi, infectious diseases expert at the University of California at San Francisco

“Just because cases begin to decline, and we think the virus is abating, does not mean we should let our guard down. That’s not to say we keep all pandemic mitigation measures in place during these periods of ‘lull.’ Instead, we should be strategic, methodical, grounded through the lens of equity and based on local data to make decisions on lifting mitigation measures. We should reevaluate lifting measures like mask mandates based on local context (i.e. hospital capacity, community transmission levels, vaccination rates, access to testing); and remove measures that never really worked in the first place — like plexiglass barriers. Now, it is easy to say we should make data-driven decisions when unfortunately, our data is lagging an upwards of 2 weeks. This also means we should take this time to develop better real-time surveillance systems, so we’re not blinded again if or when cases begin to increase.”  Syra Madad, infectious disease epidemiologist at the Harvard Belfer Center

WHAT'D I MISS?

— CDC weighs new messaging around transmission and masking: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is considering updating its guidelines on the metrics states should use when lifting public health measures such as mask mandates, according to four people familiar with the matter . Agency scientists and officials are debating whether to continue to publicly support using transmission data as a marker for whether to ease public health interventions such as masking, particularly in school settings, the people said. CDC staff are weighing whether the agency should use case rates as a metric or whether it should lean more heavily on hospitalization data, particularly information on hospital capacity. In recent days, the CDC has reached out to external doctors, scientists and public health organizations for input, one of the people with knowledge of the discussions said.

The U.S. Capitol.

The U.S. Capitol. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images

— Congress strikes broad government funding deal: Congressional leaders reached an agreement to boost military and non-defense budgets, paving the way for a comprehensive deal to fund the government into the fall . The accord is a crucial breakthrough that’s expected to lead to enactment of a 12-bill spending bundle in the next few weeks. Democrats are seeking to finally override the funding levels carried over from the spending package signed into law in the last weeks of Donald Trump’s presidency, while Republicans are fighting for a military budget far above the less than 2 percent increase President Joe Biden requested.

— Lawmakers pessimistic about new Iran nuke deal: Top Biden administration officials warned senators today that Iran could produce enough material for a nuclear bomb in as little as two months, bolstering lawmakers’ concerns that the window for a diplomatic solution is rapidly closing. The assessment, delivered in a classified briefing and described by one senator as “sobering and shocking,” comes as Biden’s diplomats are racing to strike a deal with Tehran that would prevent it from acquiring a nuclear weapon.

— White House weighing former Obama adviser for senior Treasury job: Jay Shambaugh, who was a key economic adviser in President Barack Obama’s White House, is under consideration to be Treasury under secretary for international affairs, the agency’s top financial diplomat, according to three people familiar with the matter. Shambaugh, who served as a member of the White House Council of Economic Advisers from 2015 to 2017, is a professor of economics and international affairs at George Washington University and a nonresident senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution.

— U.N. postpones space diplomacy talks after Russia asks for more time: United Nations talks scheduled to take place next week to avoid an arms race in space are being postponed after Russia insisted it needs more time to prepare, according to two people briefed on the developments . Expectations have been high that the newly established “open-ended working group” can help fashion international norms that rein in what many see as an unrestrained military competition. The talks could even lay the groundwork for an eventual ban or moratorium on destructive anti-satellite tests, U.S. officials have said.

 

DON’T MISS CONGRESS MINUTES: Need to follow the action on Capitol Hill blow-by-blow? Check out Minutes, POLITICO’s new platform that delivers the latest exclusives, twists and much more in real time. Get it on your desktop or download the POLITICO mobile app for iOS or AndroidCHECK OUT CONGRESS MINUTES HERE.

 
 
AROUND THE WORLD

NOT JUST IN THE U.S. — U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced today that all remaining coronavirus restrictions in England, including Covid-positive self-isolation requirements, could be lifted in February, Louis Westendarp and Helen Collis write.

“Provided the current encouraging trends in the data continue, it is my expectation that we will be able to end the last domestic restrictions — including the legal requirement to self-isolate if you test positive — a full month early,” Johnson said during today’s Prime Minister’s Questions.

His comments were met with surprise among scientists and National Health Service leaders. While the data on hospitalizations and deaths is currently trending in the right direction, they warn that things can change very quickly. And above all, they’d like to see the scientific basis for his remarks.

The current expiration date for the restrictions is March 24, so on Johnson’s new timetable England could return to pre-pandemic levels of freedom in just over two weeks. Currently, anyone who tests positive for coronavirus should isolate for a minimum of five days. This rule applies to vaccinated as well as unvaccinated people.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

34 percent

The percentage of Americans who can find Ukraine on a map, according to a new Morning Consult poll . Among those who could locate Ukraine, 58 percent said they would support the most strenuous sanctions package if Moscow invades the country, compared to 41 percent support for voters who could not. 

PARTING WORDS

Police patrol in Times Square in New York City.

Police patrol in Times Square in New York City. | Spencer Platt/Getty Images

‘THEY’RE LOCKING UP MY TOOTHPASTE’ — The Rev. Al Sharpton is calling on New York City Mayor Eric Adams, a former police captain, to address the city’s spike in crime, calling the situation “out of control,”Samuel Benson writes

“In fairness to Eric, he’s only been mayor five weeks,” Sharpton said today during an appearance on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.” “But even as a fan of him: Eric, they’re locking up my toothpaste.”

Sharpton’s comment referred to reports that New York-area pharmacies and convenience stores have begun to place low-cost items, even toothpaste, in locked cases to prevent theft. Major crime increased 38.5 percent in January, Adams’ first month in office, compared to the same period last year, according to a NYPD report.

“I mean, we’re talking about basic stuff here,” Sharpton said. “I’m like, what did I miss that we now have to lock up toothpaste?”


 

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