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Showing posts with label J & J. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Delta’s winter is coming

 


 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY RENUKA RAYASAM

Presented by

COVID’S KNOWN UNKNOWNS — Covid will always be with us. And one day, it will become an endemic disease — one that is more predictable and less lethal. But that day won’t come for Americans this fall or winter. We’re still in a pandemic.

Covid, on this first day of autumn, is unpredictable and deadly. That’s likely to be the case for months to come.

“We are still in the acute phases,” Syra Madad, an infectious disease epidemiologist at Harvard and New York City’s public health system, said. “The only constant variable is change.”

But can things get worse? And if so, just how much worse? Even with 55 percent of the U.S. population fully vaccinated, daily Covid caseloads in the U.S. are at their highest levels since last winter.

The current surge started rippling across the Southwest and then the Southeast. Now as cases are declining in the South, they are rising in Alaska and the Northeast. The virus is still claiming 2,000 American lives every day — almost exclusively people who didn’t get vaccinated.

“It’s migrating like viral lava,” said Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

People walk through ‘In America: Remember,’ a public art installation commemorating all the Americans who have died due to Covid-19, on the National Mall Sept. 21, 2021 in Washington, D.C.

People walk through ‘In America: Remember,’ a public art installation commemorating all the Americans who have died due to Covid-19, on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images

One of the biggest sources of uncertainty is whether winter — with its holiday parties and travel and, in cooler climates, indoor gatherings — will accelerate the current Covid surge.

Osterholm predicts that about 50 to 70 million Americans lack Covid immunity from either natural infection or vaccination. That’s plenty of fuel, as he puts it, to keep the fires burning.

Then there is the uncertainty of the dance between the vaccine and the virus, including new variants that arise from the vast unvaccinated parts of the globe.

Vaccines still seem effective at preventing severe Covid cases. The unsettled debate over boosters is really an unsettled debate about how long that vaccine protection lasts.

We know how Covid is transmitted, but we still don’t understand the pattern of cases, Osterholm said. It’s not seasonal like the flu. It’s unclear why West Virginia’s cases are surging now, weeks after cases peaked in the Southeast.

Alessandro Sette, an infectious disease expert at the La Jolla Institute for Immunology, told Nightly that he thinks it’s unlikely Covid will evolve to evade vaccine defenses — that would require a lot of mutations and it’s not to the evolutionary advantage of the virus to become more lethal. It is, however, to the virus’s advantage to become more transmissible.

Still, vaccinated people have less reason to worry about a breakthrough Covid case becoming fatal.

Finally, humans are even more unpredictable than the virus. A winter Covid surge is entirely preventable, said Gigi Gronvall, an immunologist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.

But it’s hard to believe that Americans who sat out the 2020 holiday season will turn down the invitations for Thanksgiving turkey and Christmas eggnog and New Year’s champagne this year. Travel has already bounced back.

Nor has the United States adopted frequent, rapid testing, which could stem some spread.

The country missed its chance to stomp out the virus early this year by failing to get vaccinated in high enough numbers, letting Delta run rampant. Experts hope that case surges, vaccine mandates and the authorization of a Covid shot for kids will lift the country’s vaccination rate.

But it’s clear that vaccine resistance is entrenched in certain segments of the population. About a quarter of Texans said they likely won’t get vaccinated according to a recent poll from The Dallas Morning News and The University of Texas at Tyler.

Things could have been different. Last year it seemed like we would be in a better place than we are now, with a disease that is manageable, like the flu.

“This winter might mark a different turning point,” said Saskia Popescu, an epidemiologist and biostatician at George Mason University and the University of Arizona.

Instead of the end of the pandemic and the start of an endemic, this winter might introduce us to a different, and unsettling, stage. One where we are no longer in lockdown but learning to treat a deadly virus as a normal part of our lives. One, where with any luck, the virus finally runs out of people to infect.

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 Altria:

Moving beyond smoking. Altria’s companies are leading the way in moving adult smokers away from cigarettes – by taking action to transition millions toward less harmful choices. We are investing in a diverse mix of businesses to broaden options beyond traditional, combustible cigarettes. See how we’re moving.

 


WHAT'D I MISS?

Courtesy of POLITICO

— Biden says U.S. will quadruple climate aid to poor countries: President Joe Biden said today that the United States would provide more than $11 billion of climate aid annually by 2024 to assist poorer countries vulnerable to extreme weather and rising temperatures. But the president did not specify in his speech to the United Nations General Assembly how he plans to convince Congress to increase aid from a previously announced $5.7 billion commitment, which doubles Obama-era aid levels.

— Dems yank $1B for Israeli missile defense from doomed shutdown and debt patch: House Democratic leaders today pulled $1 billion for Israeli missile defense from a government funding package that will bring them no closer to stopping a government shutdown or avoiding a debt default. The funding bill hit a last-minute snag after a group of House progressives revolted over the $1 billion it would have provided for the Pentagon to help replenish Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system.

— Johnson & Johnson says booster shot provides strong protection against Covid: The company said a late-stage clinical trial found that giving a second shot of the single-dose vaccine produced 75 percent protection against moderate and severe disease globally. That figure rose to 94 percent in the United States.

— Schiff: Jan. 6 investigation going ‘straight to subpoenas’ in some cases: The select panel investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection is preparing to issue immediate subpoenas to witnesses whom the panel expects to resist cooperation, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), chair of the House Intelligence Committee, said today. Schiff said the break from previous practices is an acknowledgment of the short timeline that the Jan. 6 panel faces to try to unearth details about the Trump White House’s role in the Capitol attack and the former president’s attempts to subvert the 2020 election results.

— Mayorkas vows ‘dramatic results’ in coming days on Haitian migrants: Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas told Congress today that the Biden administration is aiming to relocate the thousands of migrants camped along the U.S. border in Del Rio, Texas by the month’s end. He said that the administration is continuing to ramp up “the frequency and number” of repatriation flights for the migrants, the bulk of whom hail from Haiti.

— Facebook paid billions extra to the FTC to spare Zuckerberg in data suit: Facebook conditioned its $5 billion payment to the Federal Trade Commission to resolve the Cambridge Analytica data leak probe on the agency dropping plans to sue Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg individually, shareholders allege in a lawsuit.

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

CHINA TO STOP FINANCING OVERSEAS COAL Chinese President Xi Jinping said today his country would end support for building new coal-fired power plants abroad, a move that would cut off a key source of financing for the fuel most responsible for climate change.

Xi’s announcement to the United Nations General Assembly will end the flow of cash from the world’s largest public financier to foreign coal projects, and it comes on the heels of similar pledges by Japan and South Korea earlier this year.

China had been the subject of a pressure campaign by the United States and other G-7 nations to halt its overseas support of coal power plants. U.S. climate envoy John Kerry had made coal the central topic of his meetings with officials in China earlier this month.

AN OCEAN AWAY — A top EU official today urged Europe and the United States to “pause and reset” their “broken” relationship, adding fuel to an ongoing dispute between France and Washington over a new security deal between the U.S., U.K. and Australia.

The EU’s Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton — an appointee of the French government under President Emmanuel Macron — made the comment during a visit to Washington where he met with U.S. counterparts to discuss coronavirus policies, technology and cybersecurity issues.

“There is a growing feeling in Europe — and I say this with regret — that something is broken in our trans-Atlantic relations,” Breton, the E.U. trade commissioner, said.

“Trust is not a given,” he said. “And after the latest events, there is a strong perception that trust between the E.U. and U.S. has been eroded.”

 

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NIGHTLY NUMBER

46

The percentage of likely voters who would support Democrat Terry McAuliffe in the Virginia governor’s race if the election were today, according to a poll conducted for the Presidential Coalition by Kellyanne Conway, a former senior adviser to former President Donald Trump. The poll showed McAuliffe with a slight edge over Republican businessperson Glenn Youngkin at 42 percent.

 

JOIN THURSDAY FOR A WOMEN RULE CONVERSATION ON ENDING SEXUAL ASSAULT IN THE MILITARY: Sexual assault in the military has been an issue for years, and political leaders are taking steps to address it. Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) and Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) proposed bipartisan legislation to overhaul military sexual assault policies, but still face opposition. Join Women Rule for a virtual interview featuring Sens. Ernst and Gillibrand, who will discuss their legislative push and what it will take to end sexual assault and sexual harassment in the military. REGISTER HERE.

 
 


PARTING WORDS

Rep. Anthony Gonzalez (R-Ohio).

Rep. Anthony Gonzalez (R-Ohio). | AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster

OPINION: WHY REPUBLICANS ARE SELF-DEPORTING Anthony Gonzalez leaves no doubt about what he thinks about Trump and his impact on the GOP. The former president, he says, is like a “cancer,” and he has turned his party into a toxic and hostile environment.

“I don’t believe he can ever be president again,” Rep. Gonzalez (R-Ohio) said.

But if Trump is the one supposedly headed for the exit, why is it Gonzalez who announced he would not seek reelection?

From the outside, the apparent surrender of leaders like Gonzalez may look like a case of the best lacking all conviction, while the worst are filled with passionate intensity, writes Charles Sykes, editor-at-large of the Bulwark, in POLITICO Magazine.

For Gonzalez, though, a chance to sit alongside Reps. Matt Gaetz (Fla.), Lauren Boebert (Colo.) and Louie Gohmert (Texas) in a Trumpified GOP caucus for another two years simply was not worth putting the lives of his wife and children at risk.

Gonzalez insists that, despite his retirement, he is not abandoning his opposition to Trump nor his determination to prevent him from holding office again. “Most of my political energy will be spent working on that exact goal,” he told the New York Times. Georgia’s Geoff Duncan strikes a similarly defiant note, pledging to help create a post-Trumpian GOP 2.0.

But this seems like a triumph of optimism over political reality. By leaving office and ceding the field to the Trumpists, they are also ensuring that the identity of the GOP is now frozen in place and will be for a generation.

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Moving beyond smoking. Altria’s companies are leading the way in moving adult smokers away from cigarettes. Today, we are taking action to transition millions toward less harmful choices.

From cigarettes to innovative alternatives. By investing in a diverse mix of businesses, Altria is working to further broaden options. Our companies are encouraging adult smokers to transition to a range of choices that go beyond traditional, combustible cigarettes.

From tobacco company to tobacco harm reduction company. And while Altria is moving forward to reduce harm, we are not moving alone. We are working closely with FDA and other regulatory bodies, and will work strictly under their framework.

See how we’re moving.

 
 

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Tuesday, July 13, 2021

Dems pull stunning move to kill GOP voter suppression

 

Today’s Action: Support the End Polluter Welfare Act!


Today's Top Stories:

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Texas House Democrats leave state to block Republicans from passing heinous voting restrictions

Democrats left Texas for Washington, DC en masse Monday evening in a bold attempt to thwart Republican efforts to pass sweeping voter-suppression legislation.

Take Action: Donate to support Texas Democrats amid walkout


Trump embraces Capitol rioters, rewrites Jan. 6 history during Fox News appearance
"They were peaceful people, these were great people... the love in the air, I’ve never seen anything like it."

Take Action: Tell Congress: Censure Scott Perry and Marjorie Taylor Green for comparing Democrats to Nazis


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Tucker Carlson finally goes overboard on COVID vaccine

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: OMG.


Indicted Trump Organization executive Allen Weisselberg removed from top roles at two dozen subsidiaries
Weisselberg, the Trump Organization chief financial officer indicted on tax fraud charges this month, has quietly been removed from top positions with at least 28 Trump subsidiaries, replaced in several instances by Donald Trump Jr.


FDA adds warning to J&J vaccine for possible link to rare neurological disorder
The move comes after reports of 100 cases of Guillain-Barré syndrome following the Johnson & Johnson shot. If confirmed, the 100 cases would represent a tiny fraction — less than 0.001 percent — of the more than 12.8 million J&J doses that have been administered in the United States.

Take Action: Add your name to call for EVERY STATE to expand Medicaid to those who need it!


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Biden says US "stands firmly" with Cuban people amid protests against communist regime

The president hailed the' "clarion call for freedom" from the thousands of Cubans who've mounted the biggest protests against the communist government in decades.

Take Action: Tell Congress to pass Biden's infrastructure plan to create jobs and finally rebuild America!


Gov. Gavin Newsom can't be listed as a Democrat on California recall ballot
A Sacramento County Superior Court judge ruled against Newsom after he missed a deadline for the Sept. 14 election to state his political affiliation following a paperwork oversight.


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NDLB releases first ad of the campaign, and it pulls no punches

No Dem Left Behind: "Republicans are terrorists."


Trump turns on Justice Kavanaugh in new book by Michael Wolff
"Where would he be without me? I saved his life. He wouldn't even be in a law firm. Who would have had him? Nobody. Totally disgraced. Only I saved him."


California to pay sterilization victims
More than 60,000 people across the United States were forcibly sterilized by state-run programs throughout the 20th century, including more than 20,000 people over seven decades in California, under a eugenics law enacted in 1909.


Biden administration says states can restart pandemic unemployment benefits as lawsuits moun
The guidance comes as jobless residents in more states file lawsuits to reinstate the benefits. Unemployed workers in Ohio and Oklahoma this month joined those in Indiana, Maryland, and Texas in turning to state courts to force their Republican governors to resume the payments.


Judge grills lawyers on flimsy election fraud claims at Michigan hearing on possible sanctions
Judge Linda Parker pinned down "Kraken lawyers" Sydney Powell and Lin Wood in a marathon video court hearing Monday on whether they had done due diligence before filing election fraud claims in federal court in November.


Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.

Hope...



Today’s Action: Support the End Polluter Welfare Act!

Millions of people have experienced flash flood warnings in the past weeks due to hurricane Elsa, despite it being downgraded from a tropical storm. Critical infrastructure, like the Subway system in New York City, has been overwhelmed by the amount of rainfall causing mass flooding. Hurricane Elsa has broken the record just set last year for the earliest recorded formation in the Atlantic basin thanks to climate change.

Despite increasing climate catastrophes, American taxpayers fund $15 billion dollars every year directly subsidizing fossil fuel companies (who are directly responsible for our climate crisis.) It does not matter how many people do their part to cut down on individual energy use, oil and gas corporations are still planning new drilling projects.

It is not the fossil fuel executives that will suffer from burning forests, melted infrastructure, flooded transit -- it is the working class. We need consequences for big businesses exploiting our natural nonrenewable resources.

Call (202-224-3121) or email your representatives and demand that they support the End Polluter Welfare Act, which would eliminate federal subsidies and close tax loopholes for coal, gas, and oil industries!

With climate change worsening, we can only expect more record breaking hurricane seasons. As we have seen in the Northeast, the majority of the infrastructure that millions of people rely on in their cities is nowhere near able to withstand the climate disasters our present holds-- let alone the future.

Climate initiatives are needed now, but clean energy has some powerful enemies working to ensure that crude oil is here to stay.

Our tax dollars need to be divested elsewhere, into initiatives that protect our most vulnerable communities from our warming planet.

Call (202-224-3121) or email your representatives and tell them to fight for our future and protect our environment from exploitation by supporting the End Polluter Welfare Act!

PS — Please don't forget to sign the petition demanding Texas drop charges against Hervis Rogers, and be sure to follow OD Action on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.




POLITICO NIGHTLY: Scoop: The Obama scandal Biden wants to bring back

 



 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY MICHAEL GRUNWALD

Presented by

AstraZeneca

With help from Myah Ward

THE SOLYNDRA SOLUTION — Climate hawks want to do more. Deficit hawks want to spend less. So as Congress and the Biden administration draft their next batch of trillion-dollar bills, there’s renewed interest in a long-dormant funding vehicle that’s climate-friendly and budget-friendly enough to appeal to both kinds of hawks.

The political twist is that the vehicle is the Department of Energy’s Loan Program Office, best known for its ill-fated half-billion-dollar loan to the solar manufacturer Solyndra. The office hasn’t made a single loan since Solyndra went bust a decade ago.

But sources tell POLITICO Nightly that the Biden administration is working with congressional Democrats to harness it to accelerate the clean-energy transition.

Then-President Barack Obama tours the Solyndra solar panel company in Fremont, Calif., in 2010.

Then-President Barack Obama tours the Solyndra solar panel company in Fremont, Calif., in 2010. | Paul Chinn-Pool/Getty Images

It’s obvious why climate hawks love the idea. During the Obama administration, the loan office supported solar, wind and geothermal power; electric-car factories; carbon-capture projects; transmission lines and zero-emissions nuclear energy. Now Democrats want to use it to finance other low-emissions technologies.

But the loan program also has fiscal appeal, because under congressional accounting rules a dollar of government lending can count as just a penny of government spending, which could help get more bang per budgeted buck into the bipartisan infrastructure bill being crafted on the Hill.

That’s because most Energy Department loans, unlike the Solyndra debacle, are repaid with interest. The department actually turned a profit on the $30 billion it lent to various clean energy initiatives after President Barack Obama’s 2009 stimulus bill, with a default rate of less than 3 percent. And the office still has $40 billion in unused lending authority, because it basically shut down after the brutal political backlash to Solyndra. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm has vowed to start taking risks again, and Biden sent a strong signal of support when he appointed the well-respected clean-energy entrepreneur Jigar Shah to run the loan office.

Granholm and Shah made a pitch to congressional staff last week, and sources say several proposals to funnel cash into lending programs are now floating around the Hill.

For example, Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, the chair of the Energy Committee and the arbiter of what Democrats get to pass these days, has circulated language authorizing $2.1 billion worth of loans for pipelines that help sequester carbon dioxide. A provision like that could add as little as $21 million to the price tag of the bipartisan infrastructure bill.

Manchin also wants to expand a lending program for fuel-efficient automobile manufacturing — best known for a $465 million loan that saved Tesla from bankruptcy in 2009 — to cover fuel-efficient trucks, buses, trains, boats and even Tesla founder Elon Musk’s concept of a people-moving “hyperloop.” His language suggested $8 billion in new lending authority, which could get a Congressional Budget Office score as low as $80 million.

There’s also talk that a $27 billion proposal to fund a nonprofit “green bank” that would in turn finance innovative clean-energy investments could instead be funneled through the loan office, which could reduce its price tag to $270 million without changing its basic purpose.

As the infrastructure talks continue, negotiators could find it tempting to use the loan office to finance everything from biofuels to batteries to green hydrogen projects.

Congress loves using credit programs that use the power of the federal balance sheet to reduce the cost of financing college, housing and even shipbuilding. It’s an efficient way to move money — unless there’s a wave of defaults.

“It’s already a wildly successful tool for driving the clean energy transition, no matter what people say about that one company that shall not be named,” said Sam Ricketts, co-founder of the climate policy shop Evergreen Action. “It can’t be the only tool we use, but it’s a great way to use the backstop from Uncle Sam to get money out the door.”

Solyndra will still loom over every federal clean-energy loan, and the next default will surely cause more blowback. The loan office has created a new risk management division to minimize the risk of future Solyndras. But lending is an inherently risky enterprise. As one Obama administration veteran points out, hardly anyone blames the government when Pell Grant recipients end up as drunks on the street, but when a big government loan goes bad, heads are expected to roll.

Then again, it’s hard to jump-start new industries without taking risks. The loan program helped create markets for solar and wind projects that now routinely attract private financing. Climate hawks like the idea of creating even more green stuff, and deficit hawks like the idea of exploiting budget rules to do it on the cheap.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas for us at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s authors directly at mgrunwald@politico.com and mward@politico.com, or @MikeGrunwald and @MyahWard.

A message from AstraZeneca:

Through COVAX, we are working with partners GAVI (the Vaccine Alliance), WHO (World Health Organization), CEPI (Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations) and SII (Serum Institute of India) to ensure people around the world have access to safe, effective COVID-19 vaccines, wherever they live and regardless of income level. Learn more here.

 
AROUND THE WORLD

THE VIRUS INSIDE CUBA — Thousands of Cubans took to the streets Sunday to protest food and medical shortages, a dire economic situation exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic. The Cuban Ministry of Health said the country had nearly 35,000 active cases of Covid today.

Cuba reported 6,423 new cases and 42 deaths today, some of the country’s highest numbers to date — though these numbers have to be taken with “a very large grain of salt,” Steven Ullmann, the director of the Center for Health Management and Policy at the University of Miami, told Nightly’s Myah Ward.

“Cuba, in terms of its image — its political image, its economic image, its social image — wants to put out the concept that it is a country that has done well economically, and has done well with other factors,” Ullmann said. “But what we see sometimes is that once one delves more into the situation, the numbers are somewhat misleading.”

Cuba was successful at keeping the pandemic under control in 2020, but that was through drastic measures like closing the country’s borders, that curbed the spread of the virus while depriving key components of the economy, like tourism. Cuba was recording less than 200 new daily cases in December 2020.

As the country gradually reopened to outsiders in 2021, case numbers spiked.

Cuba’s health care system in many ways was prepared to take on the virus. The country has highly trained medical staff and a strong primary care system, with a much higher doctor-to-patient ratio than many other countries, Ullmann said. Cuba also has a well-developed pharmaceutical sector that produced two reportedly effective vaccines (although the vaccine data is also to be taken with a grain of salt, Ullmann said).

At the same time, Cuba doesn’t have the infrastructure to roll out shots to its more than 11 million people, Ullmann said. One of the country’s vaccines, Abdala, which Cuba says is 92 percent effective against Covid, is a three-dose regime. But Cuba doesn’t have enough syringes.

And even if the country acquired the supplies, it doesn’t have the infrastructure to always sterilize the syringes, which would cause other disease outbreaks.

“So far, 1 million in the population have gotten all three doses, as per the data coming out of Cuba,” Ullmann said. “But they have a much larger population to go still.”

More on Cuba: Biden expressed solidarity with protesters in Cuba before a White House meeting on gun violence with Attorney General Merrick Garland and local leaders. “The Cuban people are demanding their freedom from an authoritarian regime. And I don’t think we’ve seen anything like this protest in a long, long time — if, quite frankly, ever,” Biden told reporters.

And Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the U.S. was joining “partners across the hemisphere and around the world in urging the Cuban regime to respect the rights of the Cuban people to determine their own future, something they've been denied for far too long.”

Secretary of State Antony Blinken

 

THE ROAD TO TOKYO 2020 – A TUESDAY CONVERSATION WITH FIRST VICE PRESIDENT OF THE IOC ANITA DEFRANTZ: The Tokyo Olympics kick off July 23, 15 months after being postponed. One problem … Japan's capital city is in a Covid state of emergency and has prohibited fans from attending. With financial pressure to push forward and potential punishment for any athletes involved in protests or demonstrations during the sporting event, these Olympics Games will be unlike any other. Join Global Translations author Ryan Heath for a POLITICO Live conversation with Anita DeFrantz, First Vice President, International Olympic Committee, on what's at stake in the Tokyo Olympics, as a global health crisis, sports and politics all come to a head. REGISTER HERE.

 
 
WHAT'D I MISS?

— Top U.S. officials see booster shots as inevitable: Biden administration health officials believe the most vulnerable Americans such as elderly nursing home residents and people who are immunocompromised, including transplant recipients, will eventually need coronavirus booster shots — but they are still debating how quickly that should happen, two administration officials said. The internal deliberations have stretched on for months as health officials watch for signs of waning immunity among the vaccinated. The talks have included extensive behind-the-scenes coordination between the administration and drug companies manufacturing Covid-19 vaccines.

— Texas Dems flee state to stop elections bill: Democratic state legislators in Texas fled the state to deny Republicans in Austin the opportunity to pass new election laws, they said today. “Texas House Democrats stand united in our decision to break quorum and refuse to let the Republican-led legislature force through dangerous legislation that would trample on Texans' freedom to vote,” a statement signed by caucus leaders read.

— FDA expected to add Guillain-Barre syndrome warning to J&J Covid shot: FDA is preparing to add a warning to Johnson & Johnson’s Covid-19 vaccine after receiving preliminary reports of patients developing the rare neurological condition Guillain-Barré syndrome after receiving the shot, a senior CDC official confirmed to POLITICO. About 100 suspected cases of GBS — among the 12.8 million people who have gotten the J&J shot — have been identified in the federal government's database for adverse side effects after vaccination, the official said.

— Utah governor admits mistake on vaccination milestone: Utah Gov. Spencer Cox said today that the state’s Covid data team “screwed up” and that Utah has not yet hit the 70 percent goal for adult vaccinations, admitting the error just days after celebrating the milestone. “Welp. We screwed up. Because of a reporting error we have not yet hit 70% on our adult vaccinations,” Cox, a Republican, posted on Twitter. “I promised to admit our mistakes and hold us accountable. I hope you will forgive us — and know we have made changes to ensure it won’t happen again.”

— France’s Macron: Coronavirus jabs for health workers to be mandatory: French President Emmanuel Macron announced a package of new measures today to boost vaccinations and beat an impending fourth wave of Covid-19 infections. In an address on French television, Macron said the Covid-19 jab would be made mandatory for all staff working in French hospitals, care homes and clinics.

 

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NIGHTLY NUMBER

8 months

The length of time the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency went without an official director. The Senate today confirmed Jen Easterly to lead CISA , filling a void at the top of an agency struggling to address widespread digital weaknesses inside the government and across the country.

 

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

 
 
PARTING WORDS

CAN CONGRESS #FREEBRITNEY? There aren’t too many issues in Washington where you’d find Rep. Matt Gaetz and Sen. Elizabeth Warren on the same side. But one is a headline-grabbing story from far beyond the Hill: Britney Spears and the conservatorship system. In the latest POLITICO Explains video , Senate reporter Marianne LeVine looks at what, if anything, the House and Senate could do to fix the nation’s guardianship rules.

Nightly video explainer on Britney Spears and conservatorship

A message from AstraZeneca:

The COVAX initiative is an unprecedented effort to ensure fair and equitable global COVID-19 vaccine distribution. Through COVAX, many more shipments of the COVID-19 vaccine, including our own product, are planned over the coming weeks and months to low- and middle-income countries as the fight against the virus continues.

We have always understood vaccination as a global, no-profit, equity-focused undertaking and were the first pharmaceutical company to join COVAX in June 2020. Through COVAX and other global initiatives, we have supplied more than half a billion COVID-19 vaccine doses to 170 countries; 300 million of which have gone to low-income regions. Learn more here.

 

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Follow us on Twitter

Renuka Rayasam @renurayasam

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"Look Me In The Eye" | Lucas Kunce for Missouri

  Help Lucas Kunce defeat Josh Hawley in November: https://LucasKunce.com/chip-in/ Josh Hawley has been a proud leader in the fight to ...