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Showing posts with label FDA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FDA. Show all posts

Friday, February 11, 2022

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Here come the Covid midterms

 


 
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BY DAVID SIDERS

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi joins a bicameral and bipartisan group of lawmakers on the East Front of the U.S. Capitol for a moment of silence for the more than 900,000 people who have died from Covid-19.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi joins a bicameral and bipartisan group of lawmakers on the East Front of the U.S. Capitol for a moment of silence for the more than 900,000 people who have died from Covid-19. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

THE VIRUS VOTERS — Joe Biden always said he’d “follow the science” on Covid, and with few exceptions — such as the White House’s premature declaration of victory over the pandemic — he’s spent the past year doing just that, largely with the support of Democrats in Congress and in the states.

But from the beginning, politicians have weighed the politics of the pandemic along with the science. And in a Monmouth University poll last week, 7 in 10 Americans — including 47 percent of Democrats — agreed with the idea that “it’s time we accept that Covid is here to stay and we just need to get on with our lives.” The poll was in line with other surveys suggesting people are tired of their restriction-altered realities. Almost on cue, Democratic-led states throughout the country started paring back mandates.

Biden was elected president in part — perhaps largely — because he promised to defeat the virus, to take more aggressive measures instead of punting the problem to the nation’s governors, as President Donald Trump had done. But since he took office, the pandemic has been a persistent drag on Biden’s presidency. Public approval of his handling of the virus has fallen underwater.

Republican strategists have described the pandemic to Nightly as a godsend, with its effects on both inflation and education, two of voters’ top concerns, as well as on Biden’s dismal public approval ratings.

GOP strategists are vowing to run on unpopular Covid restrictions even if they’ve been taken away. They gleefully predict that Biden’s party will pay a price in the midterm elections for, in their view, waiting too long.

“They are waving the white freaking flag, after they’ve completely lost the war and have nothing else to do besides retreat,” said Jeff Roe, the Republican strategist who managed Texas Sen. Ted Cruz’s presidential campaign in 2016 and helped elect Glenn Youngkin governor of Virginia last year. “The female suburban independent, college educated voter? Good luck. Add people who are married with kids, and put them in the Republican camp. [Democrats] did more damage to that coalition in the last 14 months than any Republican has done in the last 14 years.”

Fred Davis, a Republican ad maker, said that in the November elections, “People will remember that the supply chain was broken down, that kids didn’t go to school … that the world closed up.”

The prospect that people will remember school shutdowns and mask mandates  and punish Democrats for them — is one possible outcome of pandemic politics, assuming the lull continues. But let’s stipulate that, in November, children aren’t wearing masks in schools, that families have spent the summer posing for pictures at Disney World and hugging Mickey Mouse.

In that Clorox-free scenario, it’s not clear that Republicans are the party that will gain an advantage.

Take Covid away, and it’s not unreasonable to think the mood of the electorate may improve, and that Biden’s approval ratings might tick up — and perhaps help to limit Democrats’ losses in the House.

“If Covid is in the rearview mirror and there’s a return to, quote, normal, whatever normal is, the occupant of the White House will benefit,” said Lee Miringoff, director of the Marist College Institute for Public Opinion.

The other possibility — the more likely one, judging by recent history — is that if the pandemic really does subside, it may quickly fade from our politics altogether. In the run-up to last year’s gubernatorial race in Virginia, politicians and strategists of both parties were bracing for the pandemic to feature heavily. But several weeks before the election, as Covid conditions improved, polling showed Covid receding as a priority for voters. Campaign advertising related to the pandemic nearly vanished.

And by the time Youngkin defeated Democrat Terry McAuliffe, exit polls showed Covid lagging behind education and the economy and jobs as a top issue of concern. The pandemic still mattered to the extent that it infected those facets of life. But as a stand-alone issue, it was not all that salient.

This year, a pandemic-stayed November may look a lot like that — with Republicans likely to win back the House, but not because of Covid.

Republicans probably don’t need it. They will have Biden’s legislative difficulties to talk about — and gas prices and crime and critical race theory. And then there’s whatever else happens — or whatever else the right can dream up — in the nine months before the election. By November, voters may have other things to worry about.

“I think what will be top on their minds is what they’re seeing — inflation, gas prices,” said Bob Heckman, a Republican consultant who has worked on nine presidential campaigns. “I don’t even think they’ll be thinking about Covid, to be honest.”

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at dsiders@politico.com, or on Twitter at @davidsiders.

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— Biden says he’s thoroughly reviewed ‘about 4’ SCOTUS candidates so far: Biden said today that he had thoroughly reviewed about four “well qualified and documented” candidates to fill Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer’s seat on the bench. Biden, who has vowed to nominate the first Black woman to the Supreme Court, told NBC’s Lester Holt that he’d done the “deep dive” on those contenders, making sure there was nothing in their background checks that might disqualify them.

Protestors and supporters set up at a blockade at the foot of the Ambassador Bridge, sealing off the flow of commercial traffic over the bridge into Canada from Detroit in Windsor, Canada.

Protestors and supporters set up at a blockade at the foot of the Ambassador Bridge, sealing off the flow of commercial traffic over the bridge into Canada from Detroit in Windsor, Canada. | Cole Burston/Getty Images

— Canadian bridge blockade could worsen Biden’s economic headaches: The anti-vaccine protest blocking a critical trade route between the U.S. and Canada threatens to exacerbate two persistent economic challenges confronting the Biden administration: congested supply chains and rising consumer prices. A convoy of truckers opposing cross-border vaccine requirements has stopped traffic from crossing the Ambassador Bridge between Windsor, Ont. and Detroit, the busiest international crossing in North America that facilitates the exchange of more than $300 million worth of goods per day.

— Schumer moves to limit debate on FDA nomination: Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer filed cloture today on Robert Califf’s nomination to lead the Food and Drug Administration , signaling Democrats expect to have the votes to confirm him. The motion to limit debate on the cardiologist’s nomination sets up a vote next week, meeting Senate HELP Chair Patty Murray‘s goal of shepherding him through the chamber ahead of the Presidents Day recess.

— Top D.C. lobbying firm reps company alleged by former employees to have paid off Taliban: A top Washington lobbying shop has agreed to represent the U.S. parent company of a major Afghan telecom alleged by three former employees and four former senior Afghan government officials to have paid money and extended other favors to the Taliban as they fought a bloody insurgency over the last 20 years. S-3 Group filed a lobbying disclosure Nov. 1 that it now represents Telephone Systems International, the holding company for Afghan Wireless, one of the largest mobile telephone operators in the country. The document, required by U.S. law, states three of its lobbyists — John Scofield, Jose Ceballos and Michael Long — will lobby on “access to wireless communication in Afghanistan.”

— Senate clears #MeToo bill banning mandatory arbitration: The Senate cleared a bill today that would forbid clauses in employment contracts requiring workers to litigate sexual harassment and abuse cases in private , rather than a court, several years after the #MeToo movement drew attention to the issue. The legislation, which was passed by voice vote, has bipartisan support. Lawmakers drafted it in response to the #MeToo movement, which exposed how the clauses — known collectively as mandatory arbitration — prevent repeat offenders from being held accountable.

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) surrounded by reporters.

Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) surrounded by reporters. | Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

HILL HUNG UP OVER SANCTIONS — Bipartisan negotiations over how to deter a Russian invasion of Ukraine are at an impasse, top senators said today, amid fears that a Moscow invasion is imminent, Andrew Desiderio writes.

Senate Foreign Relations Chair Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) and the panel’s top Republican, Sen. Jim Risch of Idaho, indicated that their weekslong negotiations have hit several snags in recent days, including over the scope of sanctions to impose after a possible Russian incursion.

“We’re running out of runway,” Risch said bluntly. “It’s important that the Senate of the United States express … where the United States is on this issue.”

While both lawmakers have insisted that the effort isn’t dead, the remaining disputes continue to threaten the time-sensitive package. Republicans and Democrats have long disagreed over the best way to deter a Russian invasion, with GOP lawmakers insisting that some sanctions should be imposed on the front end while Democrats argue that the sanctions should come only after an incursion.

“We’re thinking of a different process to move forward,” Menendez said, citing the impasse.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

7.5 percent

The annual inflation rate in the U.S., the highest since 1982 , according to a Labor Department report. This is the second report in a row where the number has broken 7 percent.

PARTING WORDS

THE DJT TP OMG — Breaking news reporter Samuel Benson emails Nightly:

When it comes to Trump’s bathroom records-keeping practices, the fits are hitting the newsstands.

new book by New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman, scheduled for publication in October, flushes out new material on Trump’s obsession with toilets. Staff in the White House residence told Haberman they periodically found a toilet clogged with wads of printed paper, leading them to believe Trump attempted to flush ripped documents.

Trump was quick to refute the reporting. He released a statement today, calling the story “categorically untrue and simply made up by a reporter in order to get publicity for a mostly fictitious book.”

But today’s powder room dust-up is only the latest saga in Trump’s yearslong crusade against low-flow toilets and sinks. Krystal Campos put together this video of the greatest hits from Trump’s WC CV.

Donald Trump talking about toilets

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Tuesday, February 1, 2022

POLITICO NIGHTLY: What we ask when we ask about Trump

 


 
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BY ELANA SCHOR

Former President Donald Trump throws a cap into the audience during his arrival at the 'Save America' rally in Conroe, Texas.

Former President Donald Trump throws a cap into the audience during his arrival at the ‘Save America’ rally in Conroe, Texas. | Brandon Bell/Getty Images

LIGHTS, CAMERA, REACTION — A subgenre of congressional journalism flourished during President Donald Trump’s four years in office, one that I’ll call “the Republican react piece.” The formula was simple: Reporters would confront GOP lawmakers with the most ill-advised or objectionable statements from their party’s president, which forced them to align with the statement or disavow themselves from their party’s leader.

A few greatest hits from this subgenre: Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) agreeing that Trump’s 2019 tweets about House Democratic women of color were racist; Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) offering that “I can’t control that … I don’t think it’s helpful” after Trump blasted the special counsel investigating Russia’s ties to his 2016 campaign; and Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) replying, “Oh no, ugh,” when asked about Trump’s tweets attacking a 75-year-old demonstrator who was shoved by police.

Trump lost the White House and has been deprived of his favorite social media platform. But he remains the de facto head of the Republican Party and the favorite for the GOP presidential nomination in 2024. And he hasn’t stopped airing sentiments that smack of distaste for the democratic process that denied him a second term, like his suggestion during a Texas campaign rally this weekend that he would offer pardons to those prosecuted for besieging the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

So it’s time to get back to regularly asking Republicans in Congress what they think of the president’s statements. It’s time to bring back the Republican react piece in all of its glory. (And speaking as our Congress editor, you can bet that POLITICO’s reporters will do so.)

These stories aren’t mere diversions; they’re important. They’re not conceived to focus conservative ire on centrists like Collins and Murkowski who more readily criticize Trump, nor are they gotcha devices geared to yoke most Republicans to a former president whose approval ratings were nosediving by the time he left office.

Asking what GOP officeholders think of Trump’s individual statements helps suss out, on an almost granular level, how deep his hold on the party remains. And it’s also likely to further illuminate a significant divide among Republicans in Congress: the House-Senate split.

Kevin McCarthy and Mitch McConnell’s conferences have shown signs of divergence from each other all year long, from the infrastructure bill to a debt-limit deal. The House minority leader has kept Trump close, while the Senate minority leader (and his members) has shrugged off the former president’s active campaign to dislodge him.

The more Republican react pieces we see as Trump resumes his public rallies, and the more the members of the House and Senate GOP are asked to contextualize Trump’s enduring fury toward the Jan. 6 select committee and other politically resonant topics he takes up, the more we’re likely to see a split between the two chambers’ leading Republicans.

As both McCarthy and McConnell push to take back control of their respective chambers this fall, their treatment of each other and of Trump becomes ever more important.

Their differences matter for more than just legislation — efforts at accountability for the insurrection that led to Trump’s second impeachment also may hang in the balance. McCarthy has rejected the Jan. 6 panel’s request for an interview about his conversations with Trump, decrying its “abuse of power,” while McConnell has dryly observed that “it will be interesting to reveal all the participants who were involved” in the insurrection as the committee continues its work.

We may already be headed toward a resurgence of the Republican react story. Sen. Susan Collins was pressed Sunday during an appearance on ABC’s “This Week” about Trump’s dangling of pardons for the Capitol rioters. In response, the centrist Mainer said she was “very unlikely” to support Trump in 2024, though she also didn’t totally rule it out.

The Collins interview occurred before Trump released a statement claiming that former Vice President Mike Pence “did have the right to change the outcome” of the 2020 election. It’s reasonable to expect that she and her colleagues will be asked about that assertion this week.

Their responses will be deeply newsworthy as she and more than a dozen other senators hash out a deal to update the Electoral Count Act, the 135-year-old law that governs the congressional certification of Electoral College votes for president. Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), asked tonight about Trump’s latest statements on overturning the election (see, it’s happening…), “chided reporters for focusing on ‘low priority’ news,” according to HuffPost’s Igor Bobic.

Keep asking them anyway, reporters.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. The viral game Wordle has been acquired by The New York Times for “ an undisclosed price in the low-seven figures,” which is what we would be willing to pay some mornings for a hint when we’re on our sixth and final guess. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at eschor@politico.com, or on Twitter at @eschor.

WHAT'D I MISS?

— FDA gives full approval to Moderna’s Covid-19 shot: The Food and Drug Administration has approved Moderna’s Covid-19 vaccine, the company announced, making it the second to be fully licensed for use in the United States. The approval for people 18 and older will make it easier for schools and workplaces to require vaccination against the virus, now that there are two approved products to choose from, including Pfizer-BioNTech’s Covid shot. It will also allow Moderna to market its vaccine directly to consumers. In other vaccine news, Novavax has asked the FDA to authorize its Covid-19 shot for emergency use, opening the door for it to become the fourth vaccine available for adults living in the U.S.

An audience reacts to the speaker at a rally against Covid-19 vaccine mandates in Ottawa, Canada.

An audience reacts to the speaker at a rally against Covid-19 vaccine mandates in Ottawa, Canada. | Alex Kent/Getty Images

— Trudeau on trucker protest: ‘We are not intimidated’: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is refusing to bend to demands of a raucous trucker protest that has swarmed Canada’s capital in an effort to force authorities to abandon Covid restrictions and vaccine mandates. The movement has drawn thousands of people — and dozens of honking big rigs — to Ottawa’s famously placid core around Parliament Hill. The demonstrations have been nonviolent, but smaller, more menacing elements in the crowds have threatened lawmakers and journalists and to destabilize Trudeau’s government.

— Trudeau tests positive for Covid-19: Trudeau said in a tweet that he tested positive this morning. “I’m feeling fine — and I’ll continue to work remotely this week while following public health guidelines,” the Canadian leader wrote. “Everyone, please get vaccinated and get boosted.” The prime minister’s positive test comes the same day as the House of Commons is reconvening for the first time since before December.

— Crypto advocates score win as Himes revises ransomware safeguard: Rep. Jim Himes (D-Conn.) is proposing that the House narrow a financial crimes provision he drafted in Democrats’ China competitiveness bill, after cryptocurrency advocates warned the proposal threatened the industry and its users. The section at issue would expand the Treasury Department’s authority to monitor and freeze accounts at financial institutions — a policy intended to address the use of digital assets in ransomware attacks, money laundering and other illegal activity. It would give Treasury more latitude to identify any “transmittals of funds” as money laundering concerns.

— Biden to designate Qatar a ‘major non-NATO ally’: Biden today said that he intended to designate Qatar as a “major non-NATO ally,” during a meeting with the country’s head of state, Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al-Thani, at the White House. Bahrain and Kuwait are the only other non-NATO allies in the Gulf.

— Navy Secretary Del Toro tests positive for Covid: Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro has tested positive for coronavirus, according to a statement released today. Del Toro returned from official travel on Friday afternoon, the statement said, and had received negative tests on Jan. 21 and the morning of Jan. 28. He was in Pascagoula, Miss., last week, where he toured Ingalls Shipbuilding. Mississippi Republican Rep. Steven Palazzo and Sens. Roger Wicker and Cindy Hyde-Smith also took part in the shipyard tour.

AROUND THE WORLD

Members of the United Nations Security Council meet to discuss the situation between Russia and Ukraine in New York.

Members of the United Nations Security Council meet to discuss the situation between Russia and Ukraine in New York. | Spencer Platt/Getty Images

TUSSLE AT TURTLE BAY In a public showdown today at the United Nations Security Council, the U.S. accused Russia of undermining international peace and security by massing troops on the Ukrainian borderDavid M. Herszenhorn writes.

But Russia slapped back, arguing Washington was fear-mongering and forcing an unnecessary debate — allegations China later echoed.

The heated, at times angry, rhetoric at U.N. headquarters in New York came as some 100,000 Russian troops are positioned along Ukraine’s eastern border with Russia as well as its northern border with Belarus. The U.S. called the Security Council meeting to confront Russia over fears that an invasion is imminent.

“Russia’s actions strike at the very heart of the U.N. Charter,” said U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Linda Thomas-Greenfield. “This is as clear and consequential a threat to peace and security as anyone can imagine.” She added: “Russia’s aggression today not only threatens Ukraine. It also threatens Europe. It threatens the international order.”

Russia objected to the open meeting from the outset, immediately demanding a procedural vote seeking to prevent it, which failed.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

70 percent

The proportion of Americans who agreed with the statement “It’s time we accept that Covid is here to stay and we just need to get on with our lives” in the latest Monmouth University poll.

PARTING WORDS

The logo for Super Bowl LVI is seen outside the stadium before the NFC Championship Game between the Los Angeles Rams and the San Francisco 49ers.

The logo for Super Bowl LVI is seen outside the stadium before the NFC Championship Game between the Los Angeles Rams and the San Francisco 49ers. | Meg Oliphant/Getty Images

A NON-OVERTIME-RULES NFL GAME SCANDAL California Gov. Gavin Newsom defended himself amid outrage over a maskless photo he took Sunday with basketball legend Magic Johnson at an NFL playoff game in Los Angeles where all spectators were required to wear masks, Susannah Luthi writes.

“I was trying to be gracious,” the governor told reporters at a news conference on state mental health initiatives. “I took the mask off for a brief second. But I encourage people to continue to wear them.”

Celebrities and elite politicians gathered Sunday at SoFi stadium in Southern California to watch the Los Angeles Rams defeat the San Francisco 49ers in the final playoff game before the Super Bowl.

Newsom wasn’t the only high-profile California politician facing backlash from the photo. Johnson posed with a maskless San Francisco Mayor London Breed and outgoing Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti — and tagged Breed, Newsom and Garcetti in his Instagram posts.

But Newsom is seeing special outcry because he has presided over some of the nation’s strictest mask mandates. Last year’s failed recall effort against the governor gained steam after photos circulated showing him dining unmasked with lobbyists at an exclusive restaurant during a late 2020 surge, as he asked Californians to avoid gatherings.

 

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Friday, January 14, 2022

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Medal counts, meet Covid counts

 


 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY TYLER WEYANT

The West of the White House is seen at sunset.

The West of the White House is seen at sunset. | Sarah Silbiger/Getty Images

A DAY FOR HAPPY HOUR TO START EARLY AT 1600 PENN — Headline after headline today pointed in the same direction: It was one of the worst days of Joe Biden’s presidency. Some lowlights:

— SCOTUS blocked Biden’s workplace vaccine rule: The Supreme Court blocked enforcement of the Biden administration’s Covid-19 vaccine-or-test mandate for workers at large businesses but allowed enforcement of a similar mandate for certain health care workers.

— The path to a new voting rights law got more perilous: Most of the attention focused on Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), who oppose changing Senate filibuster rules. But Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) also said in a statement that he has an asymptomatic case of Covid , temporarily removing a needed vote and underscoring how perilous Democrats’ path is to advancing top priorities on party-line votes in a 50-50 chamber.

— And about Sinema: The Arizona Democrat said in a speech that while she ultimately supports the passage of Democrats’ voting rights bills, she “will not support separate actions that worsen the underlying disease of division” by changing Senate rules to pass the legislation with a simple majority vote.

THE GLOBAL FIGHT

A man is given a nucleic acid test for Covid-19 by a health worker at a private testing site in Beijing.

A man is given a nucleic acid test for Covid-19 by a health worker at a private testing site in Beijing. | Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

PREGAME JITTERS — Even if you don’t have a good memory for previous editions of this newsletter, you may have heard the Winter Olympic Games start in less than a month on Feb. 4 in Beijing.

The headlines out of China have not focused on curling qualifiers or Opening Ceremony performers. More than 20 million people are in lockdown in cities across China after Covid outbreaks. There’s even a woman stuck in a blind date’s home.

These latest lockdowns speak as much to China’s “Covid zero” strategy as to its preparations for the Olympics. Nightly chatted over Slack with China Watcher author Phelim Kine about how Chinese officials are responding to the latest outbreak. This conversation has been edited.

What do we know about China’s current lockdowns and how they are affecting the country, both in the run-up to the Olympics and beyond?

China is implementing its so-called dynamic zero-Covid strategy with a vengeance as it grapples with a worsening series of outbreaks linked to the new Omicron variant that are putting its draconian, but overall effective, Covid control mechanisms to their most serious test since the outbreak — the world’s first — in Wuhan in late 2019-early 2020.

There are currently three cities with a combined population of 20 million under complete lockdown. Residents are confined to their homes outside of essential workers. The port city of Tianjin, which is just 80 miles from Beijing, the host of the Winter Games that open on Feb. 4, has an outbreak that resulted in lockdowns of targeted neighborhoods.

The ruling Chinese Communist Party's credibility — and that of President Xi Jinping — is on the line because it has explicitly branded China’s zero Covid strategy as a winning formula that has saved lives, preserved the economy and made Beijing a safe host for the Winter Games in the midst of a pandemic. But with Omicron clearly challenging that strategy, both the Chinese govt and Xi Jinping face a critical credibility loss both domestically and internationally.

The lockdowns also have profound economic effects because the zero Covid strategy is uncompromising: It shuts down factories, ports, retail areas indiscriminately. And there have been reports of how the lockdown imposed on the central city of Xian late last month caught many residents by surprise, trapping them in their homes without adequate food supplies.

A woman wears a protective mask as she rides on a metro car next to a logo for Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics mascot Bing Dwen Dwen during rush hour in Beijing.

A woman wears a protective mask as she rides on a metro car next to a logo for Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics mascot Bing Dwen Dwen during rush hour in Beijing. | Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

What is the impact on Xi Jingping and his power in the Chinese government?

The multiplying outbreaks and their economic and social impact come at an extremely inopportune time for Xi Jinping. He had been counting on using the domestic and international platform of the 2022 Beijing Games to showcase China’s self-declared “victory over the coronavirus” and contrast it with the often stumbling and ineffective pandemic control policies in the U.S. and Europe.

And he had the statistics to back that up. China has recorded fewer than 5,000 deaths linked to Covid since it erupted in China in late 2019, while the U.S. is approaching 850,000 deaths.

But now there are whispers among Olympic team and IOC officials that the seemingly unstoppable spread of the Omicron variant may result in outbreaks among athletes and/or officials in the Olympic Village and competition areas.

Nobody is saying the Olympics might be canceled, but clearly there is high risk that athletes might test positive for Covid and be barred from competition. That certain competitions will be delayed or canceled for those same reasons. It’s possible that along with the daily medal count, media reporting of the Beijing Games will include a daily tally of athletes excluded from competition due to Covid.

The second element of the bad timing of these widening outbreaks is its occurring in the run-up to the extremely important Chinese Communist Party’s 20th Party Congress in October, when Xi is widely expected to take the unprecedented step of assuming a third term in office, which will essentially put him on a glide path to ruler-for-life status. Part of Xi’s strength in being able to make that move is his claim to have defeated the coronavirus and protected China from the pandemic while the rest of the world burned. Now it looks quite possible that China is about to enter a period of sustained and likely uncontrollable viral spread that would rob Xi of his claim to having defeated the coronavirus.

Can we expect any changes from China in terms of their Covid strategies in the near or long term?

Health experts and economists alike say the “dynamic zero Covid strategy” is fundamentally unsustainable. It essentially inflicts a cost that is as bad or worse than the “cure” in terms of economic losses, disrupted supply chains and growing public disaffection.

The U.S. and much of the rest of the world, even Australia and New Zealand, which also effectively sealed their borders for the better part of two years with a similar “zero Covid” approach, have recalibrated and reopened, if marginally, on the implicit if not explicit assumption that to a certain extent, countries need to learn to live with the virus with the best mitigation measures possible, but allowing social and economic activities to proceed as near to normal as possible.

China can’t do that as readily because it would be an implicit declaration of defeat and failure of their much-hyped strategy and because China’s domestic vaccines are demonstrably inferior to the mRNA formulas produced by Pfizer and Merck but which China has not yet seen fit to provide patents and distribution in China.

Which means relaxing the current Covid control settings would inevitably result in massive numbers of infections and deaths among an under-vaccinated population. That would incur great suffering, overwhelm China’s health system, and foster public antipathy toward a gov’t that claimed for two years that it had beaten the virus. So Xi Jinping has an extremely fraught 2022 ahead of him.

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

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— Head of far-right Oath Keepers, 10 others charged with seditious conspiracy in Capitol riot probe: The Justice Department leveled its most serious charges yet stemming from the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, accusing the national leader of the far-right Oath Keepers militia and 10 others of seditious conspiracy by plotting to use force to block the peaceful transfer of presidential power a year ago. Among those charged for the first time in one new grand jury indictment is Stewart Rhodes, a disbarred attorney alleged to have coordinated the attack on the Capitol, who has long been of significant interest to federal prosecutors probing the insurrection by Donald Trump supporters. Rhodes was arrested in Texas this morning, the Justice Department said.

— RNC feud with presidential debate commission escalates with boycott threat: The Republican National Committee has told the Commission on Presidential Debates that it intends to make GOP presidential candidates commit to boycotting its events in the future, escalating an ongoing rift between the two organizations that percolated during the 2020 election cycle. RNC officials sent a letter today to the independent and bipartisan body, which has overseen general election presidential debates for more than three decades, stating the party plans to change its rules and require candidates seeking the Republican nomination to vow not to participate in debates held by the commission.

— Senate panel advances Biden’s FDA pick: The Senate HELP Committee voted 13-8 to advance Robert Califf's nomination to head the Food and Drug Administration, putting the Biden administration one step closer to installing a permanent leader at an agency critical to the pandemic response. Two senators who caucus with Democrats — Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.) — opposed the nomination. Six Republicans — Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, Mike Braun of Indiana, Roger Marshall of Kansas, Tim Scott of South Carolina, Tommy Tuberville of Alabama and Jerry Moran of Kansas — joined them in opposition.

— Top GOP hawks warned Biden against nuclear cuts: The top Republicans on the Senate and House Armed Services committees are warning the Biden administration not to cut any newly approved nuclear weapons as it completes an internal review.

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
AROUND THE WORLD

A FIRST SENTENCE FOR SYRIAN TORTURE — A German court today sentenced former Syrian colonel Anwar Raslan to life in jail for crimes against humanity, in the world’s first trial about state-led torture by the Assad regimeLouis Westendarp writes.

In the landmark case in Koblenz, which began in April 2020, Raslan was convicted of murder, rape, sexual assault and mass torture at a prison in Damascus during Syria’s civil war, which began in 2011. Raslan served in Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad’s security services, and led the intelligence unit that oversaw the running of the jail dubbed “Hell on Earth.”

Germany’s universal jurisdiction laws were applied, which allow courts to prosecute crimes against humanity that take place anywhere in the world.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

19,579 days

The number of days since the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy. California Gov. Gavin Newsom blocked the release from prison of Kennedy’s assassin, Sirhan Sirhan , whose fatal shots half a century ago rocked America and redirected history.

PARTING WORDS

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey | AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File

DUCEY R’S WILD CARD? Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey declared in January 2021 that he was “100 percent” focused on his current job and uninterested in a bid for Senate. But speculation among state political insiders that Ducey is plotting a late entry into the Senate race has escalated in recent weeks — a development that would scramble a contest that is pivotal to the battle for the Senate majority, Natalie Allison writes.

The term-limited Republican governor, now in his last year of office, has not said anything publicly that suggests he has changed his mind. The Aug. 2 GOP primary to take on Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly is well underway as state Attorney General Mark Brnovich, venture capitalist Blake Masters, solar power executive Jim Lamon and state emergency leader Mick McGuire compete for the nomination, in a race that has already generated millions of dollars in Republican ad spending.

Ducey’s final State of the State address on Monday, however, left the Arizona State Capitol Complex abuzz after the governor used the speech to repeatedly criticize the federal government. His address included six mentions of Washington, D.C., along with sustained attacks on Biden and his administration — the kind of broadsides more likely to come from a candidate for federal office than a governor outlining his final state legislative agenda.


 

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