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Showing posts with label EVERGRANDE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EVERGRANDE. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Who’s been to a Governor’s Council meeting

 



 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

With help from Anne Brandes

ATTENDANCE RECORDS — A mayor, two state senators, a state representative and a businessman are running for a job with few official duties besides overseeing the Governor’s Council.

Playbook asked the candidates for lieutenant governor: Have you ever been to a Governor’s Council meeting?

Salem Mayor Kim Driscoll went to one meeting to support a local judicial nominee during the Patrick administration, per her campaign. She’s also been endorsed by Governor’s Councilor Eileen Duff.

State Sen. Adam Hinds and businessman Bret Bero have watched meetings virtually (Bero noted he can’t attend a meeting in person because the State House remains closed to the public). Hinds has also spoken with councilors.

State Sen. Eric Lesser’s campaign said he hasn’t attended a meeting but is in “close contact” with Mary Hurley, the governor’s councilor for western Massachusetts, and “follows the work of the Council.”

State Rep. Tami Gouveia hasn’t attended a meeting, but has “discussed the role with several governor’s councilors,” according to her campaign.

Playbook also asked each campaign for the dates of any meetings each candidate (they're all Democrats) attended and to provide proof of their attendance. None did.

What is the Governor’s Council, exactly? It’s an eight-member board elected every two years that primarily vets and votes on judicial nominees and other governor appointees. The board also weighs in on pardons and commutations and certifies election results. Meetings are available on YouTube, and they sometimes get testy.

GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTSTanisha Sullivan is running for secretary of state.

Sullivan, a Brockton-raised attorney and president of the NAACP Boston Branch, said in a launch video that she would strive to protect and expand voting rights, improve state government transparency by ensuring access to public records, and protect Bay Staters from fraud. Playbook reported last week that Sullivan, who’s been active on voting-rights issues, was considering a bid for the seat.

“In light of obstructionism that continues to stand in the way of federal action on voting rights, it falls to state leaders to protect and expand the right of every Massachusetts resident to participate in our government, and to show what a truly inclusive, representative democracy looks like,” Sullivan said. "We cannot accept incrementalism.”

Secretary of State Bill Galvin still hasn't said whether he'll seek reelection. Republican Rayla Campbell is running for the seat. Of the state's six constitutional officers, three — Galvin, state Treasurer Deb Goldberg and state Attorney General Maura Healey — haven't announced their 2022 intentions.

TODAY — Gov. Charlie Baker. Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito and education officials make a testing announcement at 10 a.m. at the State House. Polito makes a grant announcement in Framingham at 8:45 a.m. Rep. Richard Neal makes a bridge funding announcement at 10:45 a.m. in Springfield. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu hosts a media availability at a new Covid testing clinic at 11 a.m. in Roxbury and is on GBH’s “Boston Public Radio” at noon.

Tips? Scoops? Still sad about the Pats? Email me: lkashinsky@politico.com.

 

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DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “Charlie Baker files $5 billion bond bill for workforce development, cybersecurity, public safety,” by Amy Sokolow, Boston Herald: “Gov. Charlie Baker filed legislation seeking almost $5 billion for investments in long-term priorities including public safety equipment upgrades, local infrastructure grants and IT modernization.”

— From the opinion pages: “Mass. seeks to claw back at least $2.7 billion in jobless benefits it says were incorrectly paid,” by Larry Edelman, Boston Globe: “The Department of Unemployment Assistance made overpayments on about 719,000 claims in 2020-2021. It’s going after recipients even if they weren’t at fault.”

VAX-ACHUSETTS

— “Boston-area coronavirus wastewater data keeps dropping: ‘I’m cautiously optimistic,’” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The Boston-area coronavirus wastewater data continues to plunge, sparking a bit of continued optimism from local infectious disease experts that the region could be in store for a rapid decline in COVID-19 cases.”

— “As Massachusetts hospitals flounder with COVID surge, Gov. Charlie Baker announces emergency actions,” by Alison Kuznitz, MassLive: “Hours after Massachusetts hospitals executives sounded a dire alarm to the public about strained capacity amid the omicron-fueled COVID-19 surge, the Baker administration unveiled a slate of emergency actions to bolster staffing capacity.”

— “Physicians call for hospital bed tracking system,” by Christian M. Wade, CNHI/Eagle-Tribune: “As hospitals battle a record surge of COVID-19 infections, physicians are urging the state to create a system to track empty beds in emergency rooms to ease capacity issues.”

— “In less vaccinated Western Mass., overwhelmed hospitals, but progress on vaccinations,” by Priyanka Dayal McCluskey, Boston Globe: “The combination of a less protected population and the extremely transmissible Omicron variant means this part of the state is being battered especially hard by the current surge of infections.”

— "'The struggle is real': Educators work to keep classrooms open despite COVID surge," by Carrie Jung, WBUR: "Potter Road Elementary School principal Larry Wolpe says the last two weeks have been like one giant game of Tetris. For a brief moment, he thought he had every classroom covered. But that didn't last long."

— “Mean customers, panic attacks, and thousands of COVID vaccines: Retail pharmacists struggle with pandemic burden,” by Amy Sokolow, Boston Herald: “One retail pharmacist in a grocery store on the South Shore who’d been in his role for almost 25 years has been on leave since September, too scarred by his experience to go back after a mental breakdown.”

— “State attorney general's office reviewing complaints against recently shut-down COVID testing sites,” by Sam Turken, GBH News: “The Massachusetts state attorney general’s office says it’s reviewing complaints against testing sites statewide that were recently forced to shut down after operating without a license. The state Department of Public Health on Thursday issued cease and desist letters to three testing sites in Worcester, Needham and Dartmouth — all run by the nationwide Center for COVID Control.”

— “For marginalized groups, COVID testing shortages a bigger burden,” by Tiana Woodard, Boston Globe: “A lack of reliable transportation, jobs with little flexibility, and language barriers make the search for tests more grueling in low-income, immigrant, and BIPOC communities, advocates and public health specialists say.”

— “Evergrande reneges on multimillion-dollar pledge to Harvard-led COVID project, another stumble in its ties to school,” by Rebecca Ostriker and Deirdre Fernandes, Boston Globe: “A financially troubled Chinese real-estate developer has reneged on a major pledge to Harvard University, leaving a shortfall of millions of dollars for a COVID-19 research effort involving hundreds of experts from academia and industry across Massachusetts.”

WU TRAIN

 For new Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, it’s trial by fire,” by Emma Platoff, Boston Globe: “Sworn in two months ago, Wu enjoyed a whiplash two-week transition period followed by a seemingly incessant barrage of new challenges — not least of which has been a resurgent pandemic driving record levels of infections, filling hospital beds, and sending the city’s school system to the brink.”

— “‘Cards on the table’: Michelle Wu faces potentially tone-setting few weeks,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “At long-troubled Mass and Cass in the South End, whether an encampment will begin to regrow and how the city will deal with the crowds of people using and dealing drugs still on the streets remain open questions … the highly contagious omicron variant of COVID-19 continues to surge. … [And the] struggle between Wu and first-responder unions [over vaccine policies] will serve as a precursor to what is expected to be a broader fight over the next round of police labor contracts.”

WHAT CITY HALL IS READING

— “COVID-19 vaccine mandate begins in Boston amid demonstrations by opponents,by Laura Crimaldi and Andrew Brinker, Boston Globe: “As the city’s new COVID-19 vaccine mandate took effect Saturday, some 500 protesters marched through the Fenway to show their opposition to the policy, and Mayor Michelle Wu spoke out about how early morning demonstrations at her Roslindale home have impacted her neighbors and family. … The protests, [Wu] said, are a byproduct of widespread misinformation that the city seeks to neutralize with its vaccine mandates.”

— More: “Boston won’t immediately start enforcement of worker vaccine mandate,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald.

— “Embattled Boston Police sergeant, founder of anti-vax mandate group spars with police over vaccine passport,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “Embattled Boston Police sergeant and founder of an anti-vaccine mandate group, Shana Cottone, sparred with officers over her refusal to show proof of her vaccination status in a restaurant Saturday as the city’s new vaccination requirements took effect.”

 

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FROM THE HUB

— From the opinion pages: “Sheriff Tompkins still ‘ready to assist’ on Mass. and Cass,” by Shirley Leung, Boston Globe: “[Suffolk County Sheriff Steve] Tompkins outfitted an entire floor of his South Bay campus for what he calls dorm-style living with flat-TV screens, armchairs, a gym, and beds, enough to accommodate 100 people. He has plenty of room … [but since] Tompkins made his offer, the Mass. and Cass unit ― controversial from conception ― has sat empty.”

— U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts Rachael Rollins told WCVB's "On the Record" that there "may be" a role for the feds in addressing Mass and Cass: "We've seen situations where certainly there's human trafficking, there's drug trafficking there, we know that. It’s important for us to see whether we can bring the full weight and resources of the federal government into the conversation. … Those pharmaceutical companies that are pumping opioids into communities or doctors that are prescribing them, we can be helpful in assisting with things like that.”

— “New Suffolk County DA says he'll focus on equity and fairness, no decision yet on seeking election,” by Deborah Becker, WBUR: “[Interim Suffolk District Attorney Kevin Hayden says] there will be some differences between him and his high-profile predecessor Rachael Rollins, who is now the Massachusetts U.S. attorney. For example, the well-known ‘list’ of lower-level crimes that Rollins said the Suffolk DA would not immediately move to prosecute under her leadership. Hayden doesn't plan to have a formal list necessarily, but said reducing the rate of incarceration is important to him.”

FEELING '22

— MAYBE GETTING IN: Investor Chris Doughty has been calling around to Republican activists and party officials about a potential run for governor, three people who’ve spoken to him told Playbook on Friday. WBUR’s Anthony Brooks first reported Doughty’s name was floating around GOP circles. The Boston Globe’s Matt Stout has more on the Wrentham businessman. Doughty would be running against former state Rep. Geoff Diehl, who sent out a fundraising email over the weekend reminding supporters that he’s been campaigning since last July and that he “didn’t base my decision on who else might be in the race.”

— “Labor unions top PAC fundraising,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “Organized Labor, always a powerful force in Democratic-dominated Massachusetts, continues to hold sway heading into the 2022 election season — and nowhere is that clearer than in fundraising. The Office of Campaign and Political Finance put out a newsletter Thursday listing the 10 political action committees with the largest bank accounts at the end of 2021, and eight of them were union affiliates.”

PARTY POLITICS

— “Baker spent $100,000 of campaign cash on MassGOP legal fight,” by Matt Stout, Boston Globe: “Weeks after announcing he won’t seek reelection, [Gov. Charlie] Baker’s campaign paid $100,000 to help fund [Republican activist Nicaela Chinnaswamy’s] sinuous legal fight to secure a seat on the Republican State Committee, the state GOP’s obscure governing body, which Baker has tried for years to seed with like-minded, moderate allies.”

DATELINE D.C.

— “After a rough first year, CDC director Rochelle Walensky tries to correct course,” by Jess Bidgood and Felice J. Freyer, Boston Globe: “A star physician and scientist from Massachusetts General Hospital, Walensky was chosen by President Biden to take the helm of an agency that had been sidelined in the pandemic fight by the previous administration, with promises to restore its credibility. With an ever-evolving virus still raging, and the country still deeply polarized over the best tools for fighting it, it would not be easy. But Walensky has made a series of stumbles that exacerbated an already difficult task, according to multiple experts.”

More: “Walensky faces CDC burnout as pandemic enters third year,” by Erin Banco, POLITICO.

FROM THE 413

— "DA Harrington backs indicted Baltimore prosecutor; likely challenger questions commitment to Berkshire County," by Amanda Burke, Berkshire Eagle: "The top law enforcement official in the Berkshires took to Twitter over the weekend to defend the state’s attorney in Baltimore city, who was recently indicted on federal charges."

— “Western Massachusetts needs District Court judges: Governor’s Councilor Mary Hurley signals glut of openings,” by Stephanie Barry, Springfield Republican: “Aspiring judges: polish up your resumes. Governor’s Council member Mary Hurley says this is your moment, particularly if attorneys are interested in District Court positions. Recent retirements and moves to higher courts have cleared a wide runway for judicial opportunities in the four western counties, according to Hurley.”

— “UMass Amherst will require high-grade masks, such as N95s or KN95s, or double masks for students, staff during spring semester,” by Will Katcher, MassLive.

THE LOCAL ANGLE

MLK DAY: Bay State pols and activists marked Martin Luther King Jr. Day with calls to pass voting rights legislation ahead of a planned Senate effort that's predicted to fail. Sen. Ed Markey , Assistant House Speaker Katherine Clark and Reps. Ayanna Pressley, Jake Auchincloss and Jim McGovern were among those who urged in speeches and tweets to abolish the filibuster to do it. Sen. Elizabeth Warren added her voice to the chorus on CBS’s “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" on Monday night, where she acknowledged "we may not be able to carry this vote," but said if it fails "we get back in the fight."

— “Aafia Siddiqui, the jailed terrorist at the center of synagogue hostage crisis, has Massachusetts ties; local Jewish community ‘on high alert’,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The jailed terrorist at the center of the Texas synagogue hostage horror on Saturday has ties to Massachusetts, where she studied at prestigious institutions before becoming an al-Qaeda operative.”

— “Families in Alabama have free, full-day prekindergarten while many Mass. families can only dream of it,” by Naomi Martin and Jenna Russell, Boston Globe: “[W]hile Alabama ranks much lower than Massachusetts on most education metrics, experts say it is serving its children and families far better in at least one important area: prekindergarten.”

— “First woman to command USS Constitution takes over on Friday,” by The Associated Press: “Cmdr. Billie J. Farrell is scheduled to become the first woman to lead the crew of the 224-year-old warship known as Old Ironsides during a change-of-command ceremony on Friday.”

— “Cambridge appoints Christine Elow as permanent police commissioner,” by William J. Dowd, Wicked Local: “Cambridge has elevated Christine Elow from acting to the permanent police commissioner, appointing the first woman to lead the city’s police department in its 163 years of existence.”

— “Gloucester Mayor Greg Verga promises reset of City Hall,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “Verga has long experience in municipal politics, serving for eight years on the Gloucester School Committee and six on the City Council. He takes office at a challenging time, with the Omicron variant of COVID-19 ravaging the state. Already, Verga said, he is getting vitriolic emails containing Nazi imagery and threats from residents who oppose new city mask regulations.”

— “In Brookline, questions abound for the future of its police department,” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “The instability at the top of the department is unfurling amid a push by some in town to reimagine its approach to policing, efforts that have badly frayed the relationship between Brookline police and authorities running this town of roughly 63,000 people.”

— “Five Lynn officers resign, another fired, following investigation into ‘racially offensive’ texts, drug use,” by John Hilliard, Boston Globe: “Five Lynn police officers have resigned, one was fired, and two suspended following a monthslong investigation into a text exchange that included ‘racially offensive language’ and evidence of drug use by officers, the city’s police department said in a statement.”

TRANSITIONS — Samuel Gebru, former director of policy and public affairs at the Black Economic Council of Massachusetts, is now a nonresident senior fellow at Tufts University's Center for State Policy Analysis at Tisch College.

— Brittany Buford is Danielle Allen’s gubernatorial campaign manager.

— Interim Suffolk DA Kevin Hayden has named Padraic Lydon as his chief of staff and Erika Reis as general counsel. His office said current general counsel Donna Patalano and chief of staff Amanda Teo will leave at the end of the month to pursue other opportunities.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to former Sen. Paul Kirk and David Jacobs, publisher of the Boston Guardian. Happy belated to Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, who turned 37 on Friday.

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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Wednesday, September 29, 2021

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Biden’s hot and cold China policy

 


 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY RENUKA RAYASAM

Presented by the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network

Traffic passes through streets decorated with national flags in Wuhan, China.

Traffic passes through streets decorated with national flags in Wuhan, China. | Getty Images

‘BOTH SIDES HAVE TOO MUCH TO LOSE’  Joint Chiefs Chair Gen. Mark Milley told Congress today that two calls he made to his Chinese counterpart were part of his duties to “prevent war,” a sign of just how precarious the U.S.-China relationship was during former President Donald Trump’s tenure.

President Joe Biden hasn’t exactly unraveled his predecessor’s tough-on-China approach, keeping in place Trump-era tariffs and echoing the former president’s rhetoric. Despite Biden’s outward approach, there are signs that he wants to thaw the deep freeze in bilateral relations, China Watcher host Phelim Kine told Nightly today over Slack.

In the 1990s Americans were optimistic that bringing China into the economic fold would curb the country’s authoritarian tendencies. But, Phelim said, that decision helped China develop from a rural country to an economic superpower, giving it more economic leverage over the world. Now the potential failure of Chinese real estate giant Evergrande is roiling global markets and spotlighting the debt that fueled China’s growth.

Renu and Phelim chatted about the challenging relationship between the two countries. Their conversation has been edited.

What did you make of Milley’s testimony today?

Milley’s testimony is in a sense historic in that this appears to be the first time ever that a chair of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff has ever had to effectively sidestep the president of the United States to assure a strategic rival or competitor, in this case China, that perceptions of domestic chaos in the U.S. were not in any way a prelude to a possible surprise attack on China. It’s gobsmacking the head of the U.S. military machine was so concerned about China’s People’s Liberation Army perceptions of that risk. This wasn’t quite a repeat of the Cuban Missile Crisis in terms of imminent threat of nuclear holocaust through misunderstanding or miscalculation, but it was a sobering reminder that domestic turmoil in the U.S. can have profoundly dangerous implications in terms of foreign affairs and military risks.

What do we know about Biden’s approach to China?

Biden recognizes that both sides have too much to lose by maintaining the current hostile status quo, and that prompted him to initiate the outreach to Chinese President Xi Jinping earlier this month. It’s symbolically important because Biden is messaging Xi that he wants a relationship reset of some kind. Or at least a lower-level of bilateral vitriol.

And we can see that the resolution of the Meng Wanzhou case and the liberation of the Canadian citizens Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, who were essentially detained in China as hostage pawns to help broker Meng’s release. This is diplomacy at its most cravenly transactional, but at the very least it removes a major thorn affecting bilateral relations. What remains to be seen is whether Biden can truly capitalize on his personal relationship with Xi — the two men have spent many hours together in China and the U.S. over the past decade — to actually broker a return to meaningful bilateral cooperation.

For years there was this idea that by welcoming China into the economic fold and engaging with them, that the west could reduce the country’s authoritarian tendencies. Has that worked out?

There was very much an underlying belief or hope back in the 1990s in the President Clinton era that helping to integrate China into the global economic system would, osmosis-like, help to spur positive changes in China’s one-party authoritarian system. In December 2001 the U.S. granted China Permanent Normal Trading Relations and that same month China entered the WTO.

Twenty years later we can clearly see the economic and financial fruits of that opening — China has the world’s second largest economy, millions have been lifted out of poverty, China now boasts more billionaires than the U.S — but China’s authoritarian system is stronger than ever. The CCP has skillfully guided and exploited the opening of its economy to ensure that it gained maximum financial and economic advantage without ceding any political ground. And the Chinese government has channeled huge sums of that wealth into creating the world’s most sophisticated surveillance state. A state in which human rights and the ability of Chinese people to challenge the CCP’s monopoly on power are ruthlessly and systematically crushed. China now has more than 1,000 billionaires. But it also has around one million Uyghur Muslims in concentration camps in Xinjiang as part of the CCP’s conflation of Muslim identity with terrorism and a threat to state power. And the once vibrant international city of Hong Kong has withered politically, culturally and economically following the imposition of a draconian National Security Law in July 2020. Few would have predicted these kinds of negative outcomes back in those heady days of January 2001.

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.

 

A message from the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network:

The National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program (NBCCEDP) provides lifesaving cancer screenings in low-income communities, but fewer than 2 in 10 eligible individuals received breast or cervical cancer screenings through this critical safety net program. Lawmakers must take action to end this divide in access to cancer prevention, early detection and treatment. Increased funding for the NBCCEDP will help more individuals get the cancer care they need—and help end this alarming divide.

 
NIGHTLY INTERVIEW

Former Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian and his wife Yeganeh Salehi arrive at U.S. District Court for a hearing, on Jan. 8, 2018 in Washington, D.C.

Former Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian and his wife Yeganeh Salehi arrive at U.S. District Court for a hearing, on Jan. 8, 2018 in Washington, D.C. | Mark Wilson/Getty Images

EXCLUSIVE LOOK AT NEW JASON REZAIAN POD — In the summer of 2014, when the Obama administration was negotiating the Iran nuclear deal, Washington Post correspondent Jason Rezaian was arrested by Iranian authorities. Iranian guards questioned Rezaian and his wife Yeganeh about a video of Iranian youth dancing to the Pharrell Williams’ song “Happy,” and a Kickstarter campaign Rezaian launched to raise money to bring avocados to Iran.

544 Days” — Rezaian’s new podcast, named for the length of his detention in Iran — released its first three episodes today. The show details the couple’s arrest, which happened in their apartment, the early days of their detention in Tehran’s Evin Prison, notorious for abuses, and their families’ early efforts to free the pair. In the fourth episode, airing next Tuesday, Rezaian talks to John Kerry, Ben Rhodes and other Obama administration officials about how his captivity became linked to the nuclear deal talks. Listen to an exclusive Nightly preview clip.

Play audio

Exclusive Preview: Episode 4 of "544 Days"

Renu talked to Rezaian about his experiences and what the remaining episodes of “544 Days” will cover. This conversation has been edited.

You had been working in Iran for years before your abduction. How prepared — and surprised — were you about the situation you ended up in?

The audacity of it was the most surprising and shocking.

At that point, in the political geopolitical moment that we were in between Iran and world powers negotiating over the fate of the Iran nuclear deal, there seemed like a genuine desire on the part of the Iranian government to come to an agreement that would lift sanctions off of its economy. The fact that I was working for such a high-profile newspaper, I thought it brought a certain amount of cover.

You talk a lot in the podcast about being angry. Who were you angry with?

It shifted. Initially it was, “Why isn’t anybody here in Iran that knows I haven’t done anything wrong coming to my aid?” Then it’s, “Why isn’t the American government doing more to get me out more quickly?” Then it’s “Is my newspaper back home doing enough? Is my family doing enough?”

When I speak with other families who have loved ones being held hostage in Iran and other places currently or who have been in the past — that anger at the U.S. government, I understand that very well.

You won a $180 million judgment against Iran. Why did you sue in the first place?

It was a combination of some measure of justice that was denied to me for a year and half, while I was in prison in Iran. I still face an ongoing propaganda campaign by the Islamic Republic. They created a television show that is supposedly about me and all my crimes. It’s clear that they don’t feel any remorse.

And, yeah, I’d like it to be a deterrent. We understand that Iran is not going to come out and honor the verdict or the judgment in my case. It’s up to the U.S. government to decide whether or not it’s going to enforce these judgments. There are dozens of former victims of Iran and it amounts to billions of dollars.

What should Americans know about Iran?

Iran is a second tier power, but one that has been isolated from the world for so long that we just don’t have an accurate picture of what’s going on inside that country. There’s a real yearning for a freer future by the young people in that country. Engaging with Iranian actors shouldn’t be so taboo. There are people in that society that we should be talking to, and we haven’t been. We have very, very, very little insight and human intelligence on Iran and that should be concerning to everybody.

Did your captivity change your view of the country?

I used to be somebody who said, “Hey, if you’re coming to visit Iran in all likelihood you will be safe and you’ll be welcomed by the people of Iran and you’ll go home with wonderful memories.” I can’t say that anymore, obviously.

I also know that I walked out of Iran alive. We have ample examples of journalists and others who’ve been killed in countries that we’re much closer to than Iran and governments that have dispatched killers to other countries to carry out assassinations. I’m not discounting the risk of Iran at all. But that would indicate to me that they aren’t necessarily crazy. It’s something that has been pinned on the leaders of Iran for a very long time: Deranged, abusive, murderous. Yes, all of those things. But also, highly calculated.

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

Gen. Frank McKenzie

— Top generals contradict Biden, say they urged him not to withdraw from Afghanistan: Top generals told lawmakers under oath today that they advised Biden early this year to keep several thousand troops in Afghanistan — directly contradicting the president’s comments in August that no one warned him not to withdraw troops from the country. The remarkable testimony pits top military brass against the commander-in-chief as the Biden administration continues to face tough questions about what critics are calling a botched withdrawal that directly led to the deaths of 13 American service members, scenes of chaos at the Kabul airport, and the abandonment of American citizens and at-risk Afghans in the war-torn country.

— Warren opposes reappointment of Fed’s Powell: Sen. Elizabeth Warren said today she opposes a second term for Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell , calling him a “dangerous man” because of the financial regulations that have been loosened during his tenure. “Your record gives me grave concern,” the Massachusetts Democrat told Powell while he was testifying before the Senate Banking Committee. “Over and over, you have acted to make our banking system less safe, and that makes you a dangerous man to head up the Fed. And it’s why I will oppose your renomination.”

— Biden opposes changing Senate rules to raise debt limit: The White House said today that Biden opposes changing the filibuster to suspend or raise the debt ceiling, closing off a break-the-glass option to avoid financial calamity. White House press secretary Jen Psaki confirmed that Biden’s position on reforming the filibuster has not changed as Democrats search for options to deal with the approaching debt ceiling deadline amid persistent refusal from Senate Republicans to step in and help.

— Confusion over Covid-19 boosters lingers as states roll out shots: States are wrestling with how to dole out Covid-19 boosters after federal regulators set eligibility guidelines so broad that nearly all of the 100 million Americans who received the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine qualify for a third shot. People age 65 and older, as well as people 18 to 64 with underlying health conditions or jobs that increase their risk of developing severe Covid, are eligible for a third dose, federal health officials said last week. The sheer breadth of qualifying medical conditions and occupations, plus the lack of any proof requirements, means just about anyone who got the Pfizer vaccine can now seek out a booster. The only hard-and-fast rule is that people must wait at least six months after their initial two shots to get a third.

— Arbitrator slaps down Trump’s NDA challenge against Omarosa: Trump cannot enforce a nondisclosure agreement with former confidant Omarosa Manigault Newman, an arbitrator ruled late last week. The arbitrator, Andrew Brown, wrote that the terms of the agreement were “vague, indefinite, and therefore void and unenforceable.”

 

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ASK THE AUDIENCE

Nightly asks you: Has the Delta variant led you to change you or your family’s Thanksgiving or holiday plans? Use our form to send us your responses, and we’ll include select answers in a future edition.

 

DON’T MISS THIS PLAYBOOK INTERVIEW WITH REP. GOTTHEIMER AS THE HOUSE PREPARES TO VOTE : President Biden's domestic agenda is on the line, with a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill slated for a House vote on Thursday. However, moderate and progressive Democrats remain at odds over a larger, multitrillion-dollar spending package — with the left even threatening to tank Thursday's vote. Join Playbook co-author Rachael Bade for a virtual conversation featuring Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.), the leader of the centrists urging his colleagues to take the win Thursday and continue working on the second package in the coming days. REGISTER HERE.

 
 
NIGHTLY NUMBER

Oct. 18

The date on which the Treasury Department could run out of money, triggering a disastrous default on the nation’s debt that would damage the U.S. economy for years to come, Secretary Janet Yellen warned congressional leaders in a new letter this morning.

PARTING WORDS

THE 411 ON CRT — What was widely accepted for decades has now become a contentious political talking point. From local school board meetings to the presidential debate stage, critical race theory and the broader topics of equity and how we teach the nation’s racial history have spurred intense debates and protests. POLITICO’s Michael Cadenhead breaks down how CRT became such a contentious political issue. Watch:

Video on critical race theory

 

A message from the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network:

For every person who has cervical cancer detected early through the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program (NBCCEDP), nine others don’t have the chance. We must end this divide.

The NBCCEDP provides lifesaving cancer screenings in low-income communities and to uninsured and underinsured Americans, but fewer than 2 in 10 eligible people received breast or cervical cancer screenings through this critical safety net program. Increased funding for the NBCCEDP can help ensure more people get the care they need from the program and may even save states money on treatment costs when cancer is detected at earlier stages.

Tell Congress to take action and prioritize health. Tell Congress to increase funding for the NBCCEDP.

 

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